You mean true/false, right? — TheMadFool
No. I mean "true"
You can't play chess unless you take it as granted that the bishop moves on the one colour.
You can't shut the door unless you posit a door to be shut. Hence, realism.
But we are now off-topic. — Banno
Metaphysical statements are taken as true, but unjustified. — Banno
For me, to find that part where I say, "There's no way of testing this hypothesis," I invent a hypothesis that cannot be tested, and try to think why I cannot test it. Take an invisible unicorn for example. Perhaps there are invisible undectable unicorns that exist. It seems in our head like it could be true. But that's nothing we can actively test in reality, because its undetectable. — Philosophim
Siddhartha Gautama's cryptic response to the metaphysical question "does the Buddha live after death?" — TheMadFool
How do you distinguish non-propositions from metaphysical claims? — TheMadFool
Well, that doesn't say much. Justification for whom? Just you, or "us" (as in your response to RussellA), or some kind of objective justification (if that's not an oxymoron)? And what kind of justification? — SophistiCat
Interpretations of QM are equivalent with respect to a particular epistemic standard: that of being empirically distinguishable. — SophistiCat
But some people prefer one interpretation to another, even while acknowledging that they are empirically indistinguishable. — SophistiCat
Depends on how truth is understood. Some will insist that there can be no use to asserting a proposition whose status is unknowable, so it's just a bad question.
A realist might be bound to say there is a use for this sort of thing. — frank
Too, T Clark hasn't really said anything about how metaphysical claims aren't true or false. — TheMadFool
neither true nor false is a contradiction — TheMadFool
T Clark's stand on metaphysical claims is very Buddhist. — TheMadFool
In practice, decidability is a pragmatic exercise. — apokrisis
I would say that while we can model the world as if it has counterfactual definiteness all the way down - and so is seems that bivalent logic ought to apply - in fact Nature I only admits to being relatively divided. This makes it vague or indeterminate at base. — apokrisis
How do you distinguish non-propositions from metaphysical claims?
— TheMadFool
I'm not interested in going into that. Perhaps someone else will. — T Clark
At the least we need a way of distinguishing your mooted statements that are neither true nor false from other sentences that are mere nonsense - not even either true or false. — Banno
Otherwise the claim that metaphysics is nonsense rings hollow. — Banno
Can a statement be true or false if it is not possible to determine which it is, even in principle?
— T Clark
Can such a statement be constructed?
"This statement is true or it is not possible to determine that this statement is true". — Banno
(especially if the Tao te Ching is taken as a metaphysical text, which it is not.)
— Wayfarer
Of course it is. — T Clark
I’m saying that the term ‘metaphysics’ has a scope, defined originally against Aristotle, developed by the subsequent tradition. Tao Te Ching falls outside the scope. As does Vedanta and Buddhism. Which is not to say that those texts and traditions don’t deal with some of the same subjects, but they do so in very different terms, different languages and different cultural tropes. When you try and combine them all into some grand meta-subject called ‘metaphysics’ then you loose a great deal of specificity which is why you can’t find any criteria for deciding their truth or falsehood. — Wayfarer
Seems to me we can assign "true" or "false" to the above sentence without contradiction, so the answer is "yes, there can be sentences that are true or false but undecidable".1) Can a statement be true or false if it is not possible to determine which it is, even in principle? Then, if we can decide that question — T Clark
Very little. There are, after all, other things which we not only don't know, but can't know. But we muddle on.2) What happens if we can't determine if the truth of a statement is decidable in principle or not?
Do you mean that as a scientific statement in relation to quantum indeterminism or a metaphysical statement about truth and falsity in general. — T Clark
Depends on how truth is understood. Some will insist that there can be no use to asserting a proposition whose status is unknowable, so it's just a bad question.
A realist might be bound to say there is a use for this sort of thing.
— frank
Yes, this is the issue I started this thread to discuss. — T Clark
This doesn't seem to lead anywhere, because it involves a vicious epistemic circle. Truth or falsity are established in the framework of some epistemic standards. Janus's statement questions one epistemic standard, which is fine, but the resolution will require some other epistemic standards, distinct from the one that is being questioned. — SophistiCat
Metaphysics is in general the application of reason or rationality to the understanding of nature. — apokrisis
Considering "there is a god beyond our comprehension" as an example of a proposition which we can never know even in principle whether true or false.
So, the answer to T Clark's question is yes, a proposition such as "there is a god beyond our comprehension" not only can be true or false but must be either true or false.
In answer to @SophistiCat's question as to where does this lead, it leads to the knowledge that there are some things that are beyond our comprehension. — RussellA
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