The proposition is the content of the belief, not the object of the beleif. — Searle
The proposition is the content of the belief, not the object of the beleif.
— Searle
Making the Social World — Banno
He's not talking about language less creatures' beliefs. — creativesoul
"snow is white " is true iff s..........All we need to do now is work out what s might be.
— Banno
My attempt:
I believe that I am observing something that is atmospheric water vapour frozen into ice crystals and falling in light white flakes or lying on the ground as a white layer
Rather than keep saying "I believe that I am observing something that is atmospheric water vapour frozen into ice crystals and falling in light white flakes or lying on the ground as a white layer" it is more convenient to say "I believe that I am observing snow"
Where "snow" is defined as "something that is atmospheric water vapour frozen into ice crystals and falling in light white flakes or lying on the ground as a white layer".
In other words, "white" is part of the definition of "snow".
I need no knowledge of the world to know that "snow is white", only knowledge of language.
In Tarski's terms, I can say "snow is white" and a German can say "schnee ist weiss". These are said within the object language
The metalanguage is where words are defined, in that "white" is part of the definition of "snow", "white" means "weiss" and "snow" means "schnee"
Therefore, we can replace "snow is white" is true iff s by "snow is white" is true iff "white" is part of the definition of "snow", "white" means "weiss" and "snow means "schnee"
Therefore s = the linguistic declaration that "white" is part of the definition of "snow", "white" means "weiss" and "snow" means "schnee". — RussellA
Thanks Bano.Yes. Logic is a seperate topic to metaphysics and epistemology. What is discussed there is in effect the grammar of the topic, the ways on which we can put sentences together coherently.
There are a number of different ways of treating truth, that have ben expounded in logical terms. These relate to, but differ from,how we know something is true, the topic of epistemology, and the the sort of things that are true, the topic of metaphysics — Banno
It doesn't need to be "the mind-independent material world" and cohering with "some specified set of sentences" is not enough; simply being in accordance with what is experienced will do. — Janus
Thus, if the definition of truth is to conform to our conception, it must imply the following equivalence:
The sentence "snow is white" is true if, and only if, snow is white.
Hence we arrive at a definition of truth and falsehood simply by saying that a sentence is true if it is satisfied by all objects, and false otherwise.
So can you set out, succinctly, why they are wrong? — Banno
Surely I understand truth in this pre-theoretic way, as everyone who tells a truth does, but is there a post-theoretic way to understand truth as its being used? — Moliere
we might do well to look to what happens in a conversation — Banno
Note that we don't want a string of words to correspond to cat-on-the-mat-ness. — Pie
For me, the words on the right of "iff" in '"Snow is white" is true iff snow is white' point to the grounding fact of snow being white (or not). — Janus
The thing on the right is a fact. — Banno
The meaning of 'P' is P. — Pie
If 'P' is true, then P is the case, — Pie
and P is a piece of the world. — Pie
The thing on the right is a fact.
— Banno
No, the thing on the right of the T-schema is a string of words. — bongo fury
For me, the words on the right of "iff" in '"Snow is white" is true iff snow is white' point to the grounding fact of snow being white (or not).
— Janus
See, Pie and @Banno? It's not hard not to equivocate, if you don't want to: — bongo fury
And as soon as one asks what a fact is, or what it is to point, the equivocation resumes. — Banno
Snow is white. That's a fact. — Banno
Could we all just drop "state of affairs" and "proposition"? Serious suggestion. Because even the former ends up standing for "sentence". At least with those perhaps disavowing correspondence but prone to having it both ways.
Oh, and "fact", as well. — bongo fury
or what it is to point — Banno
"Snow is white" is a sentence... — bongo fury
And as soon as one asks what a fact is, or what it is to point, the equivocation resumes.
— Banno
Only for the mystic, addicted to systematic equivocation. — bongo fury
But there just is no fact of the matter whether a word or picture is pointed at one thing or another. No physical bolt of energy flows from pointer to pointee(s). So the whole social game is one of pretence. Albeit of course a powerful one. — bongo fury
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