But it's not, and adding the word "here" shows that you know it. On the other hand, "1 gallon of H2O weighs 8 pounds always and everywhere on Earth" is true. There is no case for the relativity of truth here, unless you just mean that a statement can turn out to be either true or false depending on how clear it is, or depending on your interpretation. Interpretations are relative, but interpretations are implicit reformulations--which is where things get interesting. — jamalrob
Beauty is truth, truth beauty,—that is all
Ye know on earth, and all ye need to know.
John 8:32 you will know the truth, and the truth will make you free."
Do you swear to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth...
John 18:38 "What is truth? retorted Pilate."
"Philosophy is a search for THE TRUTH." So, is philosophy in search of truths that match facts? Like "Fish absorb oxygen through their gills."
§Dark matter is thought to exist, thought to be necessary, but we haven't 'apprehended it' yet.
Again, facts aren't true or false. Propositions are true or false. — Terrapin Station
Context can negate part of the definition of a word. "Artificial light" is light that is artificial (= "man-made"), but "artificial flowers" are not flowers (i.e., genuine spermatophyte reproductive orders) that are artificial. In the latter phrase, "artificial" negates part of the definition of "flower". The bats known as "false vampires" do not feed on blood: "false" negates part of the definition of "vampire".
The ordinary definition of "fact" includes the idea of "true" (e.g., fact vs fiction); the meaning of "fact" does have other aspects (e.g., fact vs opinion). Context can negate the idea of "true". …
It follows that "true fact" need not be a redundancy.
Some use the term "fact" to mean "true proposition". — Michael
-Stanford encyclopedia of philosophyFacts, philosophers like to say, are opposed to theories and to values, they are the objects of certain mental states and acts, they make truth-bearers true and correspond to truths, they are part of the furniture of the world.
Although it seems ... obvious to say, "Truth is correspondence of thought (belief, proposition) to what is actually the case", such an assertion nevertheless involves a metaphysical assumption - that there is a fact, object, or state of affairs, independent of our knowledge to which our knowledge corresponds.
Facts, philosophers like to say, are opposed to theories and to values, they are the objects of certain mental states and acts, they make truth-bearers true and correspond to truths, they are part of the furniture of the world.
How can a fact be an object of certain mental states? — Question
But perhaps an interesting consideration is the following statements:
1a. It is a fact that the ball is red
1b. "the ball is red" is a fact
1c. The red ball is a fact
2a. It is true that the ball is red
2b. "the ball is red" is true
2c. The red ball is true
3a. It is a truth that the ball is red
3b. "the ball is red" is a truth
3c. The red ball is a truth
Do they all make sense? — Michael
We should have some sort of agreement. — Banno
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