But nobody has to resolve this for there to be a fact of the matter regarding it. It's basic theory of mind that each of us knows things the other has no clue about, but it's kind of perverse to suppose that if you don't know a thing, there cannot be a fact about it. We often have to revise what we consider to be facts as we get new information. When we do so, it's a bit ridiculous to propose that it's the facts that are changing.No one has to wonder whether you were kidding or musing or expressing your degree of confidence; in these circumstances, that is unambiguously a bet(1). — Srap Tasmaner
But nobody has to resolve this for there to be a fact of the matter regarding it. It's basic theory of mind that each of us knows things the other has no clue about, but it's kind of perverse to suppose that if you don't know a thing, there cannot be a fact about it. We often have to revise what we consider to be facts as we get new information. When we do so, it's a bit ridiculous to propose that it's the facts that are changing. — InPitzotl
That's the whole point of formalizing these things, so that everyone can know when a binding offer has been made. — Srap Tasmaner
No, that's wrong. I don't know your exact position. But I do know you said this:My position, as you see it, is this: — Srap Tasmaner
...and this:(M) I don't consider that offer, absent a way of verifying your virtual signature, a fact. — Srap Tasmaner
So this isn't really what my assumptions of your position are:(N) No one has to wonder whether you were kidding or musing or expressing your degree of confidence; — Srap Tasmaner
It's not that "someone has to know [I've] made a bet(1)" so much as it is that you explicitly said you don't consider a bet(1) ("offer") to be a fact absent something you called "a way of verifying" something you called a"virtual signature".My position, as you see it, is this:
(a) someone has to know you've made a bet(1) for there to be one;
(b) which means if no one knows it, then there isn't one, it's not a fact;
(c) and thus once they know about it, somehow their knowledge brings the fact about, which is crazy because it was the action of the bidder that brought about the fact of an offer having been made. — Srap Tasmaner
No, a bet(2) is binding; a bet(1) need not be. When South bid two no-trump, that's a bet(1); South is offering to play a game of no-trump with a win condition of scoring 8 tricks. But it's not binding until after West, North, and East all pass.but specifically about the making of a binding offer, what we're calling a bet(1) — Srap Tasmaner
that you can state a fact without any observation to back it up. If Leonardo was gay, that is a fact. If Leonardo was not gay, that is a fact. We have no way of knowing which is the fact; and that is a fact — Janus
If you confine the meaning of 'fact' to one of its common usages; i.e.true statements, then of course it will only be statements that are facts or not. If you allow for ... facts as actualities... — Janus
Improper how? The difference between "known to be true" and "actuality" is that the former appeals to my mental states and the latter does not. The latter treatment is much more pragmatic precisely because it unbinds factuality from my mental states. For example, this allows me to talk about yesterday, when I mistakenly thought X was a fact and the idea of Y did not even occur to me, in such a manner that I consider (with hindsight) X to have not been a fact yesterday and Y to have been a fact yesterday.I do indeed restrict the meaning of 'fact' to statements known to be true. I believe using it for pretty much anything out there ("actualities") is simply improper. — Olivier5
The latter treatment is much more pragmatic precisely because it unbinds factuality from my mental states. For example, this allows me to talk about yesterday, when I mistakenly thought X was a fact and the idea of Y did not even occur to me, in such a manner that I consider (with hindsight) X to have not been a fact yesterday and Y to have been a fact yesterday. — InPitzotl
I'm not sure why. My car won't start... I would like to be able to say there's some fact of the matter that explains why it won't start. It doesn't seem helpful at all to consider whether there exists a person who knows that or not.But to say it was a fact during the cambrian, when nobody knew what carbon was, rings improper to my ear. — Olivier5
Incidentally, I'll bring this up now... it's been bugging me for a while. I think you're distracting yourself with the contract business... bets can be contracts, but bets are not fundamentally contracts... rather, they are fundamentally games. More precisely, bets are things you win or lose. The thing you bet on defines the win condition. The wager is simply an add-on to give a penalty and/or reward for winning or losing. — InPitzotl
Yes, that's the general idea. But again, it's a game that you win or lose.So we compete by assigning differing truth values to a statement — Srap Tasmaner
Yes. They are playing a scheduled basketball game.The Lakers and the Celtics will compete. — Srap Tasmaner
I think what you mean to say is that we're not playing basketball. But we are indeed competing. There's a winner of the bet and a loser of the bet. If I win, you lose; if you win, I lose. That's a competition.You and I are not competing. — Srap Tasmaner
I don't think this cuts to the idea of what a bet is. Suppose Joe needs $10 and offers to wash my dishes to earn it. I tell Joe, "sorry, I only have $5, and I just bet on the Celtics game with Srap. Tell you what, though. If the Celtics win, I'll let you wash my dishes for $10." Despite what Joe and I have being conditioned on the same actions and events our bet is conditioned on, Joe and I do not have a bet... it's simply a conditional contract.We have simply agreed to take certain actions -- one paying the other what is owed -- based on the outcome of an event. — Srap Tasmaner
Actually, yes, we are. But in our discussion we just brought up two senses of the word bet... bet(1) and bet(2), and the game you're talking about here is neither a bet(1) nor a bet(2). Back to the bridge analogy, the entire bidding process is part of the game. When South says two no-trump, that's a bet(1). There's no bet(2) until bidding is complete. But the bidding process in itself is "betting", and that's a game. When you and I are deciding which team to bet on and what to wager, we are "betting" and that's a game in the same sense.How do we play? If I say, "I'll bet you five bucks the Lakers win," are we playing now? — Srap Tasmaner
Correct.Actually, our beliefs don't even enter into it. — Srap Tasmaner
So close! A prediction is not the same thing as a bet. A prediction is either true or false, but a bet is either won or lost. When you bet on a prediction, you're adding something personal. Suddenly it's not just a matter of some X being true or false; it's about you, winning if X is true; and you, losing if X is false. Even if it's just a token win, that's a stake, and it's precisely that that makes a bet and a prediction distinct.But it's not betting, it's predicting. Betting "proper" is making a prediction with stakes. — Srap Tasmaner
We're going around in circles. The only real fact here -- the way I understand the word -- is about your ignorance of Leonardo's sexual orientation. — Olivier5
I do indeed restrict the meaning of 'fact' to statements known to be true. I believe using it for pretty much anything out there ("actualities") is simply improper. — Olivier5
2 is what you arrive at when you add 1 and 1. It is the simplest definition of 2 that I know of. — Olivier5
You might say it is the primary instance of 2, or something like that, I suppose. — Janus
I believe there is a fact of the matter, though, — Janus
Yes, I was already aware that you don't acknowledge the synonymy of 'fact' with 'actuality' despite its being as common a usage as the other. — Janus
What if he had no sexual orientation? What if he was asexual or pansexual or zoophile? In these cases Leonardo was neither gay nor straight. — Olivier5
If you have an example of a common usage of the word 'fact' as 'unknown actualities', I'm interested. I never saw it used this way. — Olivier5
You see? The problem with your attitude to facts is you tend to box them in your imagination before they even appear phenomenologically. Doing so is dangerous, it assumes a lot, that could turn out false. Your definition of facts gives you a false certainty. — Olivier5
It is also confusing the concept of fact with the concept of objective truth, and generally I believe that words have distinct meanings and that one should not confuse them. What you are talking about is truth. — Olivier5
My car won't start... I would like to be able to say there's some fact of the matter that explains why it won't start. It doesn't seem helpful at all to consider whether there exists a person who knows that or not. — InPitzotl
That's weak. None of your alternatives is better in this scenario than "fact of the matter". "Reason why [my] car won't start" is definitely not what is being meant here; sure, there is a reason it doesn't start, but what's being referred to is the fact that that reason is a fact I don't know. "Cause" is the wrong idea... my car doesn't aka does not start. "Problem" is not what's being expressed... there certainly is a "problem", but the same idea applies for "reason"... what's being referred to is the fact that the problem is a fact that I do not know. Think of the term "counterfactual definiteness" as an alias for "fact of the matter" in this scenario... contrast this to something like Bell's Theorem. What's being conveyed is that there's a very specific thing that's wrong with my car... it's a thing that's true about the car's state at the time that I do not know it; it doesn't merely "become true" once we start looking for it. If I were to explain it I would convey this using a fact; a true statement that describes that state. I'm trying to find out what true statement describes that state that conveys why the car does not start. Hypothetically, someone else could know it; hypothetically, and possibly realistically, I could know it the future but it would still be true right now.What doesn't seem helpful to me is to shoehorn the word 'fact' in places where another word would work better. — Olivier5
I'm not talking to the mechanic; I'm talking with you. You dragged the mechanic in. See above for the idea being conveyed.That's what I would say to the mechanic, not "there ought to be some fact of the matter about it not starting". — Olivier5
...than to convince me that I meant something I did not in fact mean?But to say it was a fact during the cambrian, when nobody knew what carbon was, rings improper to my ear. — Olivier5
We use the same language to challenge each other to contests: "Bet I can beat you to the mailbox" might be met with "You're on!" and the kids race, or with "Loser takes out the trash?" in which case there's now an actual wager being offered, but it's still not a wager until the other says "Deal!" — Srap Tasmaner
The Lakers and the Celtics will compete. — Srap Tasmaner
Yes. They are playing a scheduled basketball game.
You and I are not competing. — Srap Tasmaner
I think what you mean to say is that we're not playing basketball. But we are indeed competing. There's a winner of the bet and a loser of the bet. If I win, you lose; if you win, I lose. That's a competition. — InPitzotl
A prediction is not the same thing as a bet. A prediction is either true or false, but a bet is either won or lost. When you bet on a prediction, you're adding something personal. Suddenly it's not just a matter of some X being true or false; it's about you, winning if X is true; and you, losing if X is false. Even if it's just a token win, that's a stake, and it's precisely that that makes a bet and a prediction distinct. — InPitzotl
In base 2 numeration, it is a fact that 1+1=10. — Olivier5
There are 10 kinds of people, those who understand binary and those who don't.
It is one of the hallmarks of a bet that its outcome is entirely dependent on the outcome of another event, the one you're betting on. — Srap Tasmaner
Yeah, but you can improve your chances if you study the riders and the horses before the bet, right? Then the competition can be who is the best at reading the facts and picking the winner. Have I understood correctly? — Athena
what's being referred to is the fact that the problem is a fact that I do not know. — InPitzotl
Presuming you mean that one, I do the investigation myself. Turns out it's a curious one... there is a blown fuse. It is a fact that there was a blown fuse.What work is the word "fact" doing in this sentence, that would be missing if it wasn't there? — Olivier5
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