We need a general relation between an individual and a possible state of affairs, to use when someone is wrong as to the truth. — Banno
It may be well worth setting out the agreements, or similarities between our views. I had hoped that that would take place a bit in the debate, but it did not. — creativesoul
Part of the issue between Banno and I is that he equivocates the term proposition. — creativesoul
It may be well worth setting out the agreements, or similarities between our views. I had hoped that that would take place a bit in the debate, but it did not.
— creativesoul
For me, the debate hinged on how you and Banno regard states of affairs (which I raised here). It seems to me that you were not really rejecting states of affairs so much as using different terminology, such as events, or perceptible things and their spatiotemporal relations. So there may be more agreement than it seems.
Consider a scenario where a cat watched a mouse run behind a tree and then chased after it.
Here are three statements we might make:
(1) The mouse ran behind the tree.
(2) The cat believed that the mouse ran behind the tree.
(3) The cat believed that the proposition "the mouse ran behind the tree" was true.
I think both of you would agree that (1) and (2) is true. And, on the assumption that (3) meant that the cat explicitly formulated a linguistic sentence and assented to it, that (3) is false. — Andrew M
...your differences would be over whether (1) (as an event). — Andrew M
(1) - as an event - cannot be true, whereas (1) - as a statement about those events - arguably can. — creativesoul
I would add that as I use the terms, events are states of affairs, as are relations such as Earth being the third planet from the Sun (and whatever else can potentially be stated). — Andrew M
I would add that as I use the terms, events are states of affairs, as are relations such as Earth being the third planet from the Sun (and whatever else that can potentially be stated) — Andrew M
So, as with events, states of affairs can't be true (or false). Instead they are what make statements true (or false). — Andrew M
Whatever else can potentially be stated?
:brow:
That's the same conflation between statements and events(states of affairs) that I reject from Banno. — creativesoul
So, as with events, states of affairs can't be true (or false). Instead they are what make statements true (or false).
— Andrew M
Part of what makes statements true or false anyway... — creativesoul
Do you believe that it's a property of the world that whatever happens in it can potentially be stated? — fdrake
I would add that as I use the terms, events are states of affairs, as are relations such as Earth being the third planet from the Sun (and whatever else can potentially be stated).
— Andrew M
Whatever else can potentially be stated?
:brow:
That's the same conflation between statements and events(states of affairs) that I reject from Banno. — creativesoul
No, that's a distinction between the world (which we can potentially talk about) and our talk about the world. — Andrew M
So, as with events, states of affairs can't be true (or false). Instead they are what make statements true (or false).
— Andrew M
Part of what makes statements true or false anyway...
— creativesoul
What else do you have in mind? — Andrew M
Do you believe that it's a property of the world that whatever happens in it can potentially be stated?
— fdrake
Yes. — Andrew M
States of affairs are not equivalent to whatever can potentially be stated. Falsehoods can be stated. True statements as well. States of affairs aren't capable of being true or false. You said so yourself. So...
We do need to draw the distinction between states of affairs and what can be potentially be stated. You are not. — creativesoul
Language less belief and the content thereof. You are focusing upon irrelevancy.
You? — creativesoul
Is omniscience a fashionable aim these days? — creativesoul
If there is some state of affairs, then there can potentially be a statement that picks out that state of affairs. Symbolically, x and "x" pick out the same x. — Andrew M
Part of the issue between Banno and I is that he equivocates the term proposition.
— creativesoul
Could be... — frank
If there is some state of affairs, then there can potentially be a statement that picks out that state of affairs. Symbolically, x and "x" pick out the same x.
— Andrew M
So, is the second sentence a typo, or deliberate sophistry? Which the otherwise inexplicable banality of the first sentence is designed to camouflage?
Or have you convinced even yourself that the picker-outer is properly identified with the picked-out? — bongo fury
Do you believe that it's a property of the world that whatever happens in it can potentially be stated? — fdrake
Yes. — Andrew M
Loaded questions. — Andrew M
So is the second sentence a typo, — bongo fury
Symbolically, x and "x" pick out the same x. — Andrew M
(DPC) For every (*) event E there exists (**) a statement S( E ) such that E is the truth maker for S( E )
Do you agree with that formulation? — fdrake
This raises a question of time. — fdrake
No. An event does need to be representable in language, in principle (i.e., such that language users could potentially make a statement S(E)). But it need not actually be represented by someone in practice, now or ever. — Andrew M
The content of a true belief is a state of the world which we, as human beings, can potentially represent in language. Would you agree with that? — Andrew M
You seem to be looking to disagree on things that, as far as I can tell, we have no real disagreement about. — Andrew M
All experience consists of a creature capable of attributing meaning. — creativesoul
No. An event does need to be representable in language, in principle (i.e., such that language users could potentially make a statement S(E)). But it need not actually be represented by someone in practice, now or ever.
— Andrew M
So your claim's more like:
(DPC) For every event E possibly there exists a statement S( E ) such that E is the truth maker for S( E ).
? — fdrake
What does wondering whether or not we could possibly represent some state of the world in language have to do with the content of language-less belief? — creativesoul
Most states of the world are not directly perceptible. All language-less belief is about directly perceptible things. — creativesoul
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