It would be good for a brute-fact to be something undeniable, or at least something whose denial has the burden of proof. Maybe it wouldn't be called a "brute fact" then, because maybe only arbitrary brute-facts are brute-facts.
What would be a brute fact that is undeniable, or whose denial has the burden of proof?
Is it? That's not how, for example, Searle used the term. — Banno
Further, what is the assigned value of a property, as distinct from the property? — Banno
Or are you saying that a brute fact is a property and an individual of which that property is true? — Banno
But if that is the case, how does a brute fact differ from a fact per se? — Banno
The assigned value of a property is everything that can be said about it, this is distinct from the object itself, — Question
Whatever can be said about the object and compared with itself. — Question
The truth value of brute facts are not subject to modalities and are not contingent unlike facts per se. — Question
If something is not subject to modality, then ipso facto it cannot be discussed in terms of possible worlds. — Banno
Distinct from what object? The assigned value is what can be said about red that is distinct from the red sports car? Or is it what can be said about red that is distinct from every red item? — Banno
And that is my point. What is it we are talking about? — Banno
Going back briefly to the beginning:
"His analysis is that there has to be some things for which there is no explanation that explain the things that do have explanations. Something must be brute." — Cuthbert
But is that sound? I'm not sure. Suppose there exist no things that lack an explanation, at least in principle. Then there would be an infinite regress of both things to be explained and of explanations.
Suppose we accept that possibility. In that scenario, whenever we find an explanation we also find a new thing to be explained.
I think we are tempted by the notion of brute facts because it opens up the possibility that in the future anything that can be explained will have been explained; and that anything that has not been explained is beyond explanation. It's a comforting thought, perhaps. But there's no reason to suppose that we will ever reach that happy state.
And even if we did reach it, we would never know that we had reached it, because we could never be quite certain that the things we presume to be 'brute facts' are not, after all, explicable by something else.
So perhaps the whole 'brute fact' idea is an illusion.
Are there facts that do not have explanations? — Michael
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