It's not obvious to the anti-realist.
If you're only "argument" against anti-realism is that it's "obviously" wrong then it's not an argument, just a denial. — Michael
….isn’t existentialism generally concerned with ethical normativity…. — Wayfarer
A simple account would be to first argue that "'it is raining' is true" means "it is raining", and then to argue that "it is raining" is meaningful only if it describes a verifiable event. It would then seem to follow that "'it is raining' is true but unverifiable" makes no sense. — Michael
If the antirealist says we can know whether or not there is a god or a multiverse then they should be able to give an account of how that would be possible. — Janus
But "'it is raining' is true" means that it is raining, not "it is raining". — Banno
1. If “God exists” is true then it is possible to prove that it is true
2. If “God exists” is false then it is possible to prove that it is false
3. If it is not possible to prove that “God exists” is true and not possible to prove that “God exists” is false then “God exists” is neither true nor false — Michael
The problem is that no conjecture can be proven to be true or false, so on the antirealist view, assuming you have correctly outlined it, no conjecture could be either true or false. — Janus
It’s not clear what you mean by “means” here. — Michael
"'it is raining' is true" means "it is raining" — Michael
Not I. You appeared to do so, withYou appear to be mixing up your use and mention. — Michael
...hence my reply. Again, "'it is raining' is true" means it is raining, NOT "'it is raining' is true" means "it is raining". See the mention where there should be a use in the second?"'it is raining' is true" means "it is raining — Michael
...I would say no more than: “It is raining” is true≡ it is raining. Nothing here about meaning. I think you introduced "meaning" into the discussion - perhaps not - but either way, it remains unclear how this helps the topic, or relates to it any more than bringing in intension.Sentences (1) and (2) mean the same thing. — Michael
it remains unclear how this helps the topic, or relates to it any more than bringing in intension. — Banno
Well, no. That's far too vague. One is about the weather, the other is about a sentence. But (1) and (2) are arguably truth- functionally equivalent.Sentences (1) and (2) mean the same thing. — Michael
Ok, so are you agreeing with Dummett? I gave examples above of truths that are apparently not verifiable, and my conclusion is that verification is insufficient for a complete theory of truth. I waved at Tarski and deflation as alternatives. Next?Dummett then argues that (2) is only meaningful if it is verifiable. This is his Language Acquisition Argument. — Michael
And if verification is a poor theory of meaning and of truth, this is of no consequence.If (1) is only meaningful if it is verifiable then unknowable truths make no sense. — Michael
We are sometimes surprised by things that are unexpected. How is this possible if all that is true is already known to be true? — Banno
Overwhelmingly, you and I agree as to what is true. How is that explainable if all there is to being true is attitudes? How to explain why we share the same attitude? — Banno
We sometimes are wrong about how things are. How can this be possible if all that there is to a statement's being true is our attitude towards it? — Banno
Yeah, they can reject it all they like. It doesn't follow that they are right. ∀p(p→◊Kp)⊢∀p(p→KpThe claim isn’t that all truths are known. The claim is that all truths are knowable. Remember, anti-realists reject Fitch’s conclusion. — Michael
...and knowledge is a propositional attitude, a relation between someone and a proposition. Same fish. SO if all truths are knowable, all truths are attitudes. Do you hold that truths are attitudes?The claim isn’t that all truths are attitudes. The claim is that all truths are knowable. — Michael
Remember, you claim to be a mathematical antirealist. Presumably you accept that mathematical truths aren’t attitudes and that there are unknown mathematical truths. So simply extend your understanding of propositions about numbers to propositions about medium sized dry goods. — Michael
...one can be a realist in one area and an anti-realist in another. — Banno
Well, no. That's far too vague. One is about the weather, the other is about a sentence. But (1) and (2) are arguably truth- functionally equivalent. — Banno
Ok, so are you agreeing with Dummett? — Banno
Yeah, they can reject it all they like. It doesn't follow that they are right. ∀p(p→◊Kp)⊢∀p(p→Kp — Banno
If you think this is wrong, tell me why. — Banno
One way to give a deflationary account of truth is to say that "P" is true IFF P. Hence for any statements of the sort ("P" is true) we can write P, removing "...is true". Nothing here about meaning. Deflation of truth doesn't equate to deflation of meaning.I’m confused. Are you a truth deflationist or not? A truth deflationist will accept that (1) and (2) mean the same thing. But now you say that they don’t mean the same thing and are only “truth-functionally” equivalent. That strikes me as being decidedly non-deflationary. — Michael
Yep. And as I have said, the difference is a choice between ways of talking about stuff. I'm not arguing that antirealism is always wrong.As the SEP article says, “Fitch’s proof is not a refutation of anti-realism, but rather a reason for the anti-realist to accept intuitionistic logic. — Michael
The choice is between saying that there are unknown mathematical truths and saying that there are unknown physical truths. I'd entertain Kripke's approach to truth for maths but not for physics. So we can usefully say that Goldbach's conjecture so far has no truth value but that there is water on Miranda is either true or it is false.I just don’t understand why you think that antirealism about mathematics doesn’t entail that all mathematical truths are known/attitudes but that antirealism about the weather entails that all truths about the weather are known/attitudes. — Michael
The choice is between saying that there are unknown mathematical truths and saying that there are unknown physical truths. I'd entertain Kripke's approach to truth for maths but not for physics. So we can usefully say that Goldbach's conjecture so far has no truth value but that there is water on Miranda is either true or it is false. — Banno
"P" is true IFF P. — Banno
That's... rather the point at issue...If Goldbach’s conjecture is provable then even if it hasn’t yet been proven it is true. — Michael
:roll: Let's not....“we are brains in a vat”... — Michael
Nuh. It can just be extensionally equivalent. Tarski and Davidson and so on. Meaning needn't feature.The above sentence is true because the sentence fragment on the left hand side (“‘P’ is true”) means the same thing as the sentence fragment on the right hand side (“P”). — Michael
I used disquotation as an example for deflationary method. That's not hard.You appear to be trying to conflate deflationism and disquotationalism. — Michael
You don't get the humour, then. Not a surprise.I think a better example is... — Michael
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