How would they mind-independently refer to something? Take the sound or ink marks "window." It mind-independently refers to something by ______? — Terrapin Station
I don't at all agree with the distinction you're making. — Terrapin Station
It's just the reference/correspondence relation between the statement and reality. If you point to a dog and say "This is a window", you refer to a dog with a word that refers to something else and therefore your statement doesn't correspond to reality and is false.So again, I'll ask you how, in that situation, the statement refers mind-independently. What are the mechanics of that? Just how does it work? — Terrapin Station
I don't agree with your view that it is a matter of subjective judgment whether there is a window in a wall or whether you will fall if you jump out of a window. — litewave
It's just the reference/correspondence relation between the statement and reality. — litewave
I'm not saying that the fact of whether there is a window or whether you will fall if you jump out of a window is subjective. — Terrapin Station
What I'm asking you is how that corresondence relation works, in mechanical/physical terms.
You can't talk about people pointing at things, saying things, doing things, etc.--that's not mind-independent. You're claiming that once the reference is set, it's mind-independent. — Terrapin Station
But if it is a fact that there is a window then the proposition "There is a window" is true. — litewave
On my view, a proposition only obtains when an indiviual thinks that proposition. You might not agree with that, but that's my view. Is that much clear? — Terrapin Station
Ok but I don't see how subjective truth is useful. I am interested in reality, not in beliefs. — litewave
And "thinking a proposition" is a state of an individual's brain, right? It is not a relation between the individual and an object, the abstract object that the proposition is, because there are no abstract objects. — Srap Tasmaner
Second, a statement requires a mind to assign referents to words. But once those referents are assigned, the truth of a statement, based on the assigned referents, is mind-independent, depending on whether the statement corresponds to reality, that is, whether it corresponds to the instantiated proposition. — litewave
Usefulness is irrelevant to reality. The reality is that propositions only obtain when individuals think them. There's absolutely no evidence of them existing otherwise. — Terrapin Station
What's the subject-predicate structure of instinctual action? Of surrealist art? — Akanthinos
Could you explain how language is capable of such a trick? — Akanthinos
What changes about the proposition when it is snared by a hunting mind, that it wasn't true before it could be put in words? — Akanthinos
So you wouldn't say that propositions necessarily have to do with meanings? — Terrapin Station
Propositions have a subject-predicate structure, for example "Surrealist art is exhibited in the local gallery." "Surrealist art" is subject and "is exhibited in the local gallery" is predicate. — litewave
The trick of corresponding to reality? Apparently, language evolved to do that trick because it was useful to communicate in a way that corresponded to reality. — litewave
I don't know anyone who would think that it is a fact that you will fall when you jump out of a window, and at the same time doubt that the proposition "You will fall when you jump out of a window" is true. But that seems to be your view. — litewave
I don't know anyone who would think that it is a fact that you will fall when you jump out of a window, and at the same time doubt that the proposition "You will fall when you jump out of a window" is true. But that seems to be your view. — litewave
How about non-finite clauses? They certainly expresses states-of-affairs, but do not have a subject-predicate structuration. And yes, you can translate one from the other and then backwards again a thousand times, but how do you justify epistemologicaly the claim that reality is also so structured, which is logically incompatible with the claim that non-finite clauses can correspond to states-of-affairs? — Akanthinos
How about every realistic phenomenon involving surrealist art which aren't expressed by the proposition "Surrealist art is exhibited in the local gallery". Do they find no place in your ontology? — Akanthinos
So, before language was evolved, we had no way to correspond to reality? That must've been rough. — Akanthinos
Once saw a dude who claimed he was Jesus and that the bonfire wouldn't burn him. — Akanthinos
Non-finite clauses have an implied subject-predicate structure too, and they can be reworded to make the structure explicit. — litewave
If someone believes that there are facts that they can know, such as that one will fall if one jumps out of a window, then it would be very unlikely that they'd not assign "true" to the proposition "One will fall if one jumps out of a window" (assuming no unusual meaning assignments, etc.) — Terrapin Station
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.