You specifically asked me about descriptions, right? — Terrapin Station
I asked you what you call a statement that describes an objective fact and what you call a statement that doesn't describe an objective fact. As an example, I offered the fact that there are two balls in a bag and the propositions "there are two balls in the bag" and "there are three balls in the bag". — Michael
I agree with that. The flux out there is the facts. — Terrapin Station
Right and I answered that. — Terrapin Station
A fact to me had to be more concrete, immobile to be useful. — Rich
But I want to know is what you call a statement that actually describes the objective fact that there are two balls in the bag. — Michael
And I told you that "accurately," as in mind-independently or objectively, as opposed to subjectively judged, when it comes to whether propositions describe anything, correctly or incorrectly, is a nonsensical idea in my view. — Terrapin Station
You could say they're "objectively ineffable." But we're subjects. We describe things subjectively. The idea of an objective description, in a literal sense, is a category error. — Terrapin Station
I wouldn't say there is anything immobile. And I'd say everything is concrete, in the sense of material. There's a flux out there, and a flux in here. Everything in in flux. And it's all material, in particular relations, undergoing particular processes. — Terrapin Station
I don't really have any idea what you're asking there. Are you asking for something like a blueprint of how concept-creation works? — Terrapin Station
So different ontologies will lead to disagreement as to the nature of facts. — Rich
Ultimately the nature of facts is directly dependent upon how one views this stuff — Rich
An example of an objective fact would be a good start. — Michael
Oh. That's easy. There's a blue bucket in my bathroom, for example. — Terrapin Station
"there is a blue bucket in your bathroom" actually describes an objective fact and "there isn't a blue bucket in your bathroom" doesn't. — Michael
I think that puts too much emphasis on us, which I think is an all-too-common error in philosophy. — Terrapin Station
Not in the sense of mind-independently or objectively, as opposed to per one's judgement, because there is no such thing as a mind-independent or objective correct/incorrect description. — Terrapin Station
For example, if one person were to say "it's wet" and another person were to say "it's dry", it's not that what the first person means by "it's wet" is what the second person means by "it's dry", as if they have some mirrored language, and are simply disagreeing on which words describe the objective fact that ball is covered in water. They have the same language. They agree on which words describe which facts. They just disagree about whether or not the ball is covered in water. — Michael
A former English teacher of mine also insisted that an author's writing were completely distinct from the author. I argued back that it is impossible to separate the creator from the creation. — Rich
I agree with you there. I just don't think that the world is our creation. — Terrapin Station
In a thought experiment where we're positing that we know they have just the same meanings in mind, etc, then yes, sure, they disagree on whether or not the ball is covered in water, which means that they are making different judgments about how the proposition relates to the world. — Terrapin Station
And those judgements can be wrong. — Michael
If, as a matter of convention, we accept that the proposition "X" refers to a particular state of affairs obtaining and that the proposition "not X" refers to that state of affairs not obtaining then if that state of affairs obtains then "X" is true and "not X" is false, , even if were were to judge otherwise. Because as you've said, the facts are independent of us.
Only in other persons' judgment. They can't be wrong objectively or mind-independently, because there is no objective meaning, no objective reference, etc. — Terrapin Station
The only way it makes any sense for "X" to refer to a particular state of affairs is for us, subjectively (and individually), to decide for "X" to refer to a particular state of affairs, and what it is for "X" to refer to a particular state of affairs is for us to think about "X" and the state of affairs in a particular way. "X" only refers in the exact way that each individual thinks about it (even if in a thought experiment, we assume they all think the "same").
Outside of us thinking about it that way, "X" doesn't mean anything and "X" doesn't refer to anything.
So while the state of affairs obtains or not independently of us (assuming it's something independent of us of course), "X" referring to anything doesn't obtain independently of us. That's a category error. So "X" can't be true or false mind-independently. — Terrapin Station
That misses the point, as I've explained. We're not disagreeing over how describe an agreed-upon fact. We're disagreeing over the fact. — Michael
And if we subjectively agree that "X" refers to a particular state of affairs, and if that state of affairs doesn't obtain, than "X" is false, even if we judge it to be true.
I'm not sure that I follow all of this. I think you're missing the point in saying that "people can disregard all sorts of things if they like." My point was that, by the cognitive relativist's own lights, his interlocutor can not only disregard the relativist's claim that "all truth is subjective/relative," but also the relativist's response that the truth that "all truth is relative" is true only for him (and other relativists, presumably).And of course it can be and often is disregarded.
Not that that depends on truth being relative. One can disregard something if truth isn't relative, too. People can disregard all sorts of things if they like.
If only the fact that people can disregard things had any particular significance.
You're probably also disregarding that it's an objective fact that truth is relative. But whether a statement about that fact is true or false is subjective of course. — Terrapin Station
No. That makes no sense, because the only way that could possibly work would be for X to mean something, to refer to something, independently of how we think about it. But that's not how it works. Meaning and reference is how we think about it, and there's nothing else to it. — Terrapin Station
As a realist, facts in no way depend on there being humans or persons. If no life existed, the world would still be overflowing with facts. — Terrapin Station
There are those of us who don't agree, at least not in any absolute way. Facts are human. Stories we tell ourselves.
When you say you are a realist, do you mean you find that a useful approach to understanding and living in the world, or are you claiming some sort of privileged perspective? — T Clark
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