if you state that a is logically equivalent to b, then the statement is considered true. — ernestm
What I tried to do was explain the definition of truth in modern logic. — ernestm
The closest thing we have to truth as human beings is something we call facts and/or data (ie. information about a physical thing) but such information is obviously transient and dependent on time, place, etc. in order for it to be useful. — dclements
That is, are you claiming that one needs a semantic interpretation in order to identify basic tautologies? — Banno
This is not that hard to visualize until you have to deal with axioms; social/culture/ideological 'truth' most people have been ingrained with since they became aware of their surroundings. Such beliefs include human life is 'good', killing is 'evil' (unless it is done to defend oneself or country), famine/ war/ disease/etc is bad; I think you get the point. — dclements
I'm going to go with redundancy. — Banno
Unanalyzable.What would you say truth is? — mew
Yes.Doesn't it presuppose truth to say what truth is? — mew
It might seem bad for someone who wants to support some ontological view by leveraging a definition of truth, but on closer examination, those people aren't really hurting anything, so no, it isn't bad.If this is so, is it bad? — mew
And don't avoid the question by saying that "it is true" means "the snow is white," because I'm not speaking in the particular, but in the general as to how "true" is to be defined.
And this is significant it seems because it you can't offer the same meaning for "true" in the examples of:
1. It is true it is snowing,
2. It is true the sun will rise tomorrow, and
3. It is true 2+2=4 — Hanover
The deflationary theory has gone by many different names, including at least the following: the redundancy theory, the disappearance theory, the no-truth theory, the disquotational theory, and the minimalist theory.
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