Does the deflationary account of truth exemplified in the T-sentence: "'p' is true iff p" escape the logic of correspondence? Does it not rely on 'p' corresponding to p? That is, does not the phrase "snow is white" correspond to the actuality snow is white? If not, then how else could it make sense ? — John
So, you may want to say that a claim (a linguistic act, e.g. a sort of behavioral episode in the life of a speaker) can correspond or fail to correspond to the way the world is. This is true, in a sense, but it just amounts to saying that claims (or beliefs) can be distanced from the world through being false (that's the way John McDowell puts it). In the case where they are true, the world simply is as it is claimed to be by the person making use of the sentence. But this is just say what the corresponding T-schema already states. It is the deflationary account. This doesn't support any further claim of correspondence between facts and sentences. It merely states a condition for a linguistic acts, suitably interpreted, to be expressing something true. — Pierre-Normand
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
OK, but that title is such as it is only because the T-schema is conventionally understood to be a deflationary account of truth. I am mainly concerned with the logic implicit in the schema and I think it is obvious that it is merely an expression of the logic of correspondence. But I would be happy to hear another account. — John
If "'X is true' is equivalent to 'X' then why can't "'X' is true' iff X" be written as "'X' iff X". — John
Although, all this is a bit of a distraction anyway because my main point is that 'snow is white' corresponds to snow being white; the argument is that if what we say does not correspond to anything then we cannot be saying anything about anything; we would be merely spinning in the void, so to speak.
Does "the present king of France is bald" correspond to something? Or what about "Obama is a senator"? — Michael
If 'snow is white is true' is equivalent to 'snow is white' then why bother with the "is true" since that is the one part of the sentence that we don't know what it corresponds to? — John
You still seem to be focusing on puzzles about truth
I want to consider correspondence independently of truth. — John
If I say I want an apple, I don't mean that I want a mental state (which is usually what we mean by experience.)I had thought I was being cautious in only claiming that what we say must be able to correspond to what we experience, — John
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