Wittgenstein does that to you! Oui? — Agent Smith
It's all the arrows. What are they doing? — Banno
And the splotch down the bottom - what's that? The thing-in-itself? — Banno
The thing in my hand is a knife or a piece of metal. We mark the difference by the context. — Banno
The string [snow is white] is a fact or a sentence. We mark the difference by the context, but in addition we can use quote marks. — Banno
Wittgenstein does that to you! Oui?
— Agent Smith
Absolutely not. Wittgenstein is scrupulous. — bongo fury
But you keep doing one word ("fact") for two things (string and alleged thing that's not also a string). — bongo fury
No. — bongo fury
Not at all. I criticised (1).
Specifically, here https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/732016 — bongo fury
"The cat is on the mat" is true ≡ The cat is on the mat
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
So yes, there are uses of "truth" that rely on the force of an utterance. There are uses of "truth" that rely on the breach of convention. There are Big Picture uses.
I propose that we might gain a better understanding of these Big Picture uses were we to have a clear grasp of the logic of truth. Tarski, Kripke, and such.
And for my money disquaotation presents that logic. At the least, understanding the logic of truth will underpin any other considerations.
But philosophy is hard, and is found in the detail rather than the trite and trivial. — Banno
Ok, change the example to a coin. There's a categorical difference between a dollar and a piece of metal. Which do you have in your pocket? — Banno
Not quite right. I don't think I've said that the sentence is a fact. Again,
1. snow is white - fact
2. "snow is white" - sentence — Banno
No, the thing on the right of the T-schema is a string of words. — bongo fury
That string of words refers to a fact. — Michael
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
Perhaps it isn't quite right to say that the right-hand side of the T-schema refers to a fact. — Michael
So what does "snow is green" refer to if not a fact? A fiction? — Michael
Exactly. According to correspondence theory in this kind of context. — bongo fury
The T-schema works with a coherence theory, too. — Michael
It doesn't excuse the equivocating between a string of words and alleged things or situations that aren't strings of words. — bongo fury
I think the issue is that facts aren’t always things, e.g material objects. — Michael
It is a fact that unicorns don’t exist, — Michael
, but the non-existence of unicorns isn’t a thing that exists. — Michael
Is there a distinction between the fact that unicorns don’t exist and the sentence “unicorns don’t exist” being true? — Michael
But I'm unsympathetic to the notion of corresponding facts generally, and even less sympathetic to their being smuggled in by systematic equivocation. — bongo fury
The world is the totality of facts, not of things (Tractatus 1.1). Rivers are things. Things are not facts. — Banno
Is the word "fact" important? — Michael
Is there a distinction between the fact that unicorns don’t exist and the sentence “unicorns don’t exist” being true? — Michael
There is no distinction between the way the world is and what the sentence represents if true, — Luke
but there is a distinction between the way the world is and the sentence that represents the way the world is. If there were no distinction, then the sentence could be neither true nor false. The sentence would be the world.
What is truth? — Pie
And replace all instances of P with English sentences, while recognizing that the quotations are an operator on all sentences that these are being mentioned, not used. — Moliere
I don’t understand the use-mention comparison. If P is the way the world is when “P” is true, this implies that “P” already has a use/meaning. And P’s being a way the world is is not a use of “P” (or a use of language). — Luke
True statements are sentences. Facts are not. — creativesoul
Yep. — Banno
1. snow is white - fact
2. "snow is white" - sentence
3. "snow is white" is true - fact
4. '"snow is white" is true' - sentence.
You seem to think that (1) and (2) are the same. They are not. But (1) and (3) are logically equivalent. Or if you prefer, (2) and (4) are equivalent. — Banno
How are they both facts? As a result of logical equivalence? — creativesoul
I believe the way most of us have been using the word "fact" here is to mean a thing that exists in the world, a state of affairs in the world, or a way a part of the world is at some time. — Luke
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