There comes a time when knowing what truth is, how it emerges onto the world stage, and it's role becomes paramount to effectively removing a societal cancer. And yet, very very few have the aforementioned knowledge...
Post truth...
Non-sequitur. Try again.
As result of the centuries long contentious debate over what truth actually was, there were some folk who were fed up with the seemingly useless task, so they began setting out how to talk and think about things without using the term...
Those ways of talking became more and more common...
Post-truth.
The claim "No post-truth" doesn't follow from "Some folk doesn't mean all folk, or even most folk".
That is a non-sequitur.
I've never claimed that a post truth world requires all folk to share the same misunderstanding. So, your talk about "all folk" and "most folk" is off target.
Are you objecting to the rise of pragmatism?
The ethical impact is clear...
Are the ends good for the overwhelming majority?
Post truth...
I said nothing about Pragmatism.
There are obviously two different senses of the term "post-truth" at work here. Yours and mine. I'm neither denying nor affirming the coherency of your usage. Nor need I.
You - on the other hand - are not granting an others' terms.
One cannot validly object to another's claims by virtue of using a different sense of a key term.
Now...
Can you formulate a valid objection?
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