What is true or false of a fictional universe is only dependent on what its creator thinks about it. — aletheist
Fair enough, but the point is that it does not depend on what anyone else thinks (or says) about it.No. What he says about it. — tim wood
No proposition about it is true of the real universe, but certain propositions about that fictional universe are true within that fictional universe. The proposition "Hamlet was the prince of Denmark" is false in the real universe, but true in the fictional universe of Shakespeare's play.Indeed, if it's a fictional universe, then no proposition about it is true - except the proposition that it is a fictional universe. — tim wood
I did not realize that this was the point, and in any case I disagree. Truth and falsity are not assigned to propositions, they are properties of propositions. The proposition "the earth revolves around the sun" was true before there were any humans around to express that proposition or to assign truth to it.But you have evaded the point. Truth and falsity are assigned to propositions. If no propositions, or, if no one to assign truth or falsity, then no truth or falsity. You need the assigner. — tim wood
No. And this is just the language - but it makes a difference. The proposition that the sun - and everything else - revolved around the earth was a proposition propounded by folks who believed and had proofs of it. For them it was a true proposition. But just one not altogether in accord with the facts.The proposition "the earth revolves around the sun" was true before there were any humans around to express that proposition or to assign truth to it. — aletheist
Truth or falsity is not a matter of human belief. A proposition that is "not altogether in accord with the facts" is not a true proposition, no matter how many people hold it to be true. A proposition about the world is true if and only if it denotes a reality as its object and signifies a fact as its interpretant.The proposition that the sun - and everything else - revolved around the earth was a proposition propounded by folks who believed and had proofs of it. For them it was a true proposition. But just one not altogether in accord with the facts. — tim wood
A proposition that is "not altogether in accord with the facts" is not a true proposition, no matter how many people hold it to be true. — aletheist
is incoherent. That's why I invited you to reconsider it. Never mind what I'm thinking, because that's not the topic, and you're not correct.A proposition that is "not altogether in accord with the facts" is not a true proposition, no matter how many people hold it to be true. — aletheist
Whether I know that something is real is irrelevant. Again, the real is that which is such as it is regardless of what anyone (including me) thinks about it.How do you know what is real? — tim wood
I explicitly stipulated that this is a fact if and only if the earth really revolves around the sun. Like all our beliefs, this one is fallible.You present as a fact that the earth revolves around the sun. — tim wood
So, you believe that the earth does not really revolve around the sun? Like all beliefs, that one is also fallible. Since they are contradictory, one of us affirms a true proposition and the other affirms a false proposition; but which is true and which is false does not depend on what either of us (or anyone else) thinks about the matter.It doesn't. Yours just a convenient fiction - a non-truth. — tim wood
So, you believe that the earth does not really revolve around the sun? — aletheist
How do you know this? I am not asking how you justify that belief, but on what basis it is (purportedly) true.I know that it doesn't. — tim wood
I would prefer that you just come out and make whatever point is on your mind.But I suspect you have no honest interest in the discussion. — tim wood
Let's start with this: does the earth revolve around the sun? — tim wood
I have been doing exactly that. One more time:I would prefer that you just come out and make whatever point is on your mind. — aletheist
I asked you what you meant by "reality." You answered,A proposition about the world is true if and only if it denotes a reality as its object and signifies a fact as its interpretant. — aletheist
Whatever is such as it is regardless of what anyone thinks about it. — aletheist
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