 Banno
Banno         
          Luke
Luke         
          Luke
Luke         
         No, you are not. The correspondence theory is not the theory that facts are individuals, nor that facts can be individuals, or anything of the sort. — Banno
 Srap Tasmaner
Srap Tasmaner         
          Banno
Banno         
         Is truth a property of sentences , or is truth a property of propositions — Pie
 Srap Tasmaner
Srap Tasmaner         
         the prosentential view remain undiscussed — Banno
 Agent Smith
Agent Smith         
          Srap Tasmaner
Srap Tasmaner         
          Janus
Janus         
         R v ~ R is true. Does R v ~R correspond to anything? — Agent Smith
 Agent Smith
Agent Smith         
          Banno
Banno         
          Agent Smith
Agent Smith         
          Banno
Banno         
         R v ~R happily corresponds to the fact of it raining, just as R v X, for any X does. — Srap Tasmaner
 Srap Tasmaner
Srap Tasmaner         
         But (~R v R) does not have the same truth value as (R v X), which would be false if it were not raining and X were false. — Banno
 Srap Tasmaner
Srap Tasmaner         
         there's going to be, at a bare minimum, a partial correspondence (it'll rain OR it'll not) — Agent Smith
 Agent Smith
Agent Smith         
          Banno
Banno         
         Obvious candidates are (a) that "possible" is short for "possibly true" — Srap Tasmaner
(3) Is what Sheila said true?
(4) Is what Sheila said possible? — Srap Tasmaner
 Agent Smith
Agent Smith         
         It is worthy of notice that the sentence “I smell the scent of violets” has the same content as the sentence “It is true that I smell the scent of violets.” So it seems, then, that nothing is added to the thought by my ascribing to it the property of truth. (Frege, 1918) — link
 Janus
Janus         
         Not so much because that's not an exclusive or. You're talking about something else. — Srap Tasmaner
That'd be ~(R & ~R). Not the same. Unless you are Meta. — Banno
 Banno
Banno         
          Banno
Banno         
         it corresponds to the fact that at any place and time it is always either raining or not raining, which amounts to much the same thing. — Janus
 Janus
Janus         
         This seems to have the odd result that the sentence "it is raining or it is not raining" is true because it corresponds to anywhere.
And here I am again at a loss to say what that correspondence amounts to. "it is raining or it is not raining" does not seem to mean "anywhere". — Banno
 Janus
Janus         
         But "Its raining, or it isn't" says nothing about time or place. It still seems odd to insist that it does, clandestinely. — Banno
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