'set' is no more technical than 'list' — TonesInDeepFreeze
second reading — Banno
"S" is true IFF X
And we can't just substitute any sentence p for S and X. — Banno
The T-sentence is intuitively appealing as a definition of truth for natural languages — Banno
How does a system of logic handle truth/falsity? — Agent Smith
Consistency: The law of noncontradiction (LNC). A truth may not entail a contradiction (p & ~p) for if ut does, it can't be a truth. — Agent Smith
Some compound statements are tautologies, true always, not semantically, but solely due to logical form e.g. (p v ~p) [the law of the excluded middle — Agent Smith
functions (argument forms) such that if the inputs are truths (the premises), the output is a ... further ... truth (the conclusion) — Agent Smith
For an n-place (n>0) function symbol, the denotation is an n-place relation on the domain. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I think we could say that the extension of a predicate or function symbol is the relation or function the symbol maps to. (?) — TonesInDeepFreeze
That is semantical. — TonesInDeepFreeze
The extension of a property is the set of all things that have the property.
That is philosophical. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Is the best course just to drop the term, then, as the nominalist recommends? Was my point originally. — bongo fury
where exactly is "snow" denoted as snow and "white" denoted as white — RussellA
where exactly is "snow" denoted as snow and "white" denoted as white ? Because if not included within the T-sentence, then how can the T-sentence be formally correct ?" — RussellA
Even though the T-sentence "snow is white" is true IFF snow is white is given in a Metalanguage (ML), it is assumed that in a Metametalanguage (MML) snow has been named "snow" and white has been named "white". — RussellA
Therefore, white is a necessary condition for snow — RussellA
Even though the T-sentence "snow is white" is true IFF snow is white is given in a Metalanguage (ML), it is assumed that in a Metametalanguage (MML) snow has been named "snow" and white has been named "white". — RussellA
Therefore, "snow is white" is true because i) snow is white, ii) snow is named "snow" and white is named "white" — RussellA
More on Putnam and Tarski - Panu Raatikainen — RussellA
the Criterion of Adequacy, and being a test of a definition, is formulated only in the metametalanguage (MML). — RussellA
Tarski always said that truth can only be defined for a particular formalized language, a language that had already been interpreted, where the meaning of the object language was fixed and constant. — RussellA
In the event that the object language was reinterpreted, for example defining "green" as white, the language changes to a different language, requiring a different T-Sentence — RussellA
it isn’t a logical truth that the (German) word ‘Schnee’ refers to the substance snow — RussellA
nor is it a logical truth that the sentence ‘Schnee ist weiss’ is true in German if and only if snow is white. — RussellA
...the main application of the Tarskian schema is for formal theories. — TonesInDeepFreeze
But it's the use of his ideas in wider philosophical discussions that made him his name. — Banno
the point — Banno
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.