Hence, according to Devitt, "no doctrine of truth is constitutive of realism". — Banno
So to the first section, in which Devitt characterises realism as the view that physical entities exist independently of the mental. Devitt notes with considerable glee that there is nothing in this definition about truth. He goes on to point out that truth is independent of the evidence at hand. "Truth is one thing, our means of discovering it, another". Hence, according to Devitt, "no doctrine of truth is constitutive of realism". — Banno
Yet I suspect that many philosophers are skeptical about Dummett's argument: it smacks too much of positivism and Wittgensteinianism
Something is odd here. — Banno
Yet I suspect that many philosophers are skeptical about Dummett's argument: it smacks too much of positivism and Wittgensteinianism
Something is odd here. — Banno
Realism (as I have defined it), requires the objective independent existence of common-sense physical entities.
- Devitt
Speaking very roughly, just to get started, realism holds that ...stuff... is independent of what we say about it; anti-realism, that it isn't. — Banno
Stealing blatantly from my Rutledge Encyclopaedia of Philosophy, a realist may hold to things like that correspondence to the facts is what makes a statement true; that there may be truths we do not recognise as such, do not believe and do not know; that the Law of excluded middle holds for things in the world; and that the meaning of a sentence may be found by specifying it's truth-conditions. An ant-realist may in contrast hold that truth is to be understood in sophisticated epistemic terms, perhaps as what a "well-conducted investigation" might lead us to believe; that there can be no unknown truths; that we need include "unknown" as well as true and false in our logical systems; and that the meaning of a sentence is to be found in what it might assert. — Banno
Or would you say that metaphysical realism as Devitt describes it is compatible with semantic antirealism as Dummett describes it? Is the “objective independent existence of common-sense physical entities” compatible with something like a verificationist account of meaning and truth? If not then proving the latter disproves the former. — Michael
But according to intuitionism objects and numbers can also be lawless, where an object is said to be "lawless" if it's existence and/or value isn't decided by the formal system it is part of, but by something not described by, and external to, the formal system. — sime
Wittgenstein'slogan has to be construed in a Wittgensteinian way to give the required support: 'use' must be taken to mean "recognizable conditions of conclusively justified use." That is how Dummett does construeit. The step from the indubitable fact to this construal is a giant step. What justifies it?
Indeed, I see what you meant now.Devitt's also right to point out that Dummett's appropriation of Witty's 'meaning is use' is somewhat underhanded. — StreetlightX
What an excellent paper. — StreetlightX
of the most commonsense, and scientific, physical types objectively exist independently
of the mental. Realism about ordinary objects is confirmed day by day in our experience . . . Given this strong case for Realism, we should give it up only in the face of powerful arguments against it and for an alternative. There are no such arguments.’ — Joshs
‘[tokens] of the most commonsense, and scientific, physical types objectively exist independently of the mental. Realism about ordinary objects is confirmed day by day in our experience . . . Given this strong case for Realism, we should give it up only in the face of powerful arguments against it and for an alternative. There are no such arguments.’ — Joshs
What strikes me as ironic is this would be the view my uneducated grandmother would hold. It's very commonsensy and relies on a very literal interpretation of experience. — Tom Storm
They're 'meaning as an entity.' Abstract objects. — frank
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