Facts are not the sort of thing that can be true or false; truth and false are predications of statements, not facts. — Banno
So what? I don't see an analogy here. — John
The meaning of a word is given by conventional usage, — John
In colloquial conventions, which are far more popular than any philosophical usage of terms, "metaphysics" refers to paranormal/parapsychological content--ghosts, pyramid power, telekinesis, etc. — Terrapin Station
. Another use of 'fact' is as a state of affairs. You cannot utter a state of affairs.Any fact that I utter. — Rich
The two uses of 'metaphysics' both refer to what is understood to be 'beyond the physical' — John
Agreed. So facts are just beliefs since there is no way to decide what is a fact without decisions. — Rich
Whether is is a true or false belief, and a true or false statement depends, not on any decision of mine, but on the whereabouts of the cat. — unenlightened
Then who decides is the whereabouts of the cat? I cannot see how a fact can be divorced from the uttered fact. — Rich
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.