Michael         
         If I understand what you're after, because the meaning of denoting (designating) is central to Tarski's Semantic Theory of Truth. — RussellA
RussellA         
         Doesn't this lead to a chicken-and-egg situation?
We can't know "Snow is white" is true unless we know Snow is white and/but we can't know Snow is white unless we know "Snow is white" is true. — Agent Smith
TonesInDeepFreeze         
         "snow" denotes snow because "snow" denotes snow. — RussellA
TonesInDeepFreeze         
         "is" names is — RussellA
Michael         
         
RussellA         
         Tarski mentioned no such pointless tautology. — TonesInDeepFreeze
TonesInDeepFreeze         
         
RussellA         
         You seem to know a helluva lot about the history of language. — Agent Smith
Agent Smith         
         I'm pretty confident that 100,000 years ago people weren't going around saying "snow is white". — RussellA
RussellA         
         Whether or not any given meta-language sentence is a translation of any given object-language sentence is a separate matter entirely. — Michael
TonesInDeepFreeze         
         One poster coemmented that P is true IFF P is a definition — Agent Smith
this is a chicken-and-egg situation — Agent Smith
Michael         
         As the T-schema doesn't give the intension of "snow is white", then it doesn't allow translation between "snow is white" and "schnee ist weiss". — RussellA
TonesInDeepFreeze         
         "snow" denotes snow because "snow" denotes snow — RussellA
PL Olcott         
         Something not quite right there. Did you mean (the Goldbach conjecture is) true XOR false? Any proposition is either true or false (principle of bivalence). — Agent Smith
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