it doesn't look like we can know a falsehood. — TheMadFool
Indeed, it doesn't look like you can. — Olivier5
I am not in the habit of talking to people who don't pay attention, sorry. — Olivier5
Did you manage to understand that Fitch can be extended to false propositions, or not yet? — Olivier5
You are a child, whether you are aware of it or not. You lack maturity. And you keep bitching petulantly about others. Stop bitching and start listening. — Olivier5
"We don't know that the earth is round"
and
"We believe that the earth is flat"?
The differences are so easy to point out that I don't see the sense in asking about it. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Argument made already.
https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/603520 — Olivier5
¬p can be stated as "p is false".
q = ¬p
q→Kq
therefore
¬p→K¬p = all false propositions are known propositions.
This is elementary, really. Reason for which I did not write it down, not wanting to insult people's intelligence. InPitzotl got it immediately. So make an effort, calm your contrarian demons and for once, TRY and understand these ultra basic logical steps above. — Olivier5
What are you sorry about, honey-bunny? — Olivier5
This proposition, you claim, is known. Ok, let's put it down in words: I know the earth is flat. — TheMadFool
You know the proposition "the earth is flat". Otherwise you couldn't talk about it... — Olivier5
How do you read "Kp"? — Olivier5
Because p -> Kp was stated.Why is
q -> Kq
being stated? — TonesInDeepFreeze
Apparently some people do. It's an antirealist position; the p doesn't exist until it's proposed, and it isn't true until you say it is, or some such thing.No one believes that as a generalization for all q. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Apparently some people do. It's an antirealist position; the p doesn't exist until it's proposed, — InPitzotl
You're confusing "antirealist"/"realist" with "unrealistic"/"realistic"... the terms convey completely different things. A realist (in this particular sense) is someone who accepts the reality of something, usually external. An antirealist denies the reality of something. The "something" in this case is English sentences nobody has mentioned. You're objecting to an accurate term describing what you're doing, on the basis of the ill-conceived notion that it was commentary.↪InPitzotl
? — Olivier5
Okay so you interpret Kp as "It is believed that p is true" or "It is known that p is true". For me it only means: "p is known", i.e. some people know about proposition p. — Olivier5
What does "p is known" mean? — TheMadFool
As explained: some people know about the existence of proposition p. — Olivier5
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