My comments about truth being a single-placed predicate are intended to show that there are uses for assigning truth to sentences outside of our attitudes towards them. I've highlighted these elsewhere -
Surprise
We are sometimes surprised by things that are unexpected. How is this possible if all that is true is already known to be true?
Agreement
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?
Error
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
What is it about antirealism that you have to say? — Banno
Antirealism doesn't claim, and nor do antirealists acknowledge that it entails, that all truths are known. — Michael
and from which follows that that all truths are known. — Mww
Sure. And they do this by rejecting classical logic.Antirealism doesn't claim, and nor do antirealists acknowledge that it entails, that all truths are known. — Michael
Yep.The second thing is that it is consistent with a deflationary account of truth. — Michael
Realism does not commit to vat brains. This is an odd objection.The third thing is that it avoids certain absurdities that realism allows for, e.g. that it is possible that we are unknowably brains in a vat. — Michael
Sure.The fourth thing, albeit directed at Janus, is that it is not obviously wrong. — Michael
We are talking about realism and antirealism. You brought in constructivism. — Banno
Let's take the knowability principle: ∀p(p → ◊Kp). — Michael
Sure. And they do this by rejecting classical logic. — Banno
Realism does not commit to vat brains. — Banno
So you think you need antirealism to avoid being a vatted brain. Right. — Banno
The problem with realism is that it entails this kind of global skepticism. If there are unknowable truths then there are unjustifiable truths, and if there are unjustifiable truths then a proposition not being justified is not a good reason to reject it. — Michael
I think the term 'antirealism' can sometimes be misleading. — Wayfarer
You are trying to claim that it follows from your premises that there are truths which are both known and unjustifiable — Leontiskos
One proposal is to construe metaphysical realism as the position that there are no a priori epistemically derived constraints on reality (Gaifman, 1993). By stating the thesis negatively, the realist sidesteps the thorny problems concerning correspondence or a “ready made” world, and shifts the burden of proof on the challenger to refute the thesis. One virtue of this construal is that it defines metaphysical realism at a sufficient level of generality to apply to all philosophers who currently espouse metaphysical realism. For Putnam’s metaphysical realist will also agree that truth and reality cannot be subject to “epistemically derived constraints.” This general characterization of metaphysical realism is enough to provide a target for the Brains in a Vat argument. For there is a good argument to the effect that if metaphysical realism is true, then global skepticism is also true, that is, it is possible that all of our referential beliefs about the world are false. As Thomas Nagel puts it, “realism makes skepticism intelligible,” (1986, 73) because once we open the gap between truth and epistemology, we must countenance the possibility that all of our beliefs, no matter how well justified, nevertheless fail to accurately depict the world as it really is. Donald Davidson also emphasizes this aspect of metaphysical realism: “metaphysical realism is skepticism in one of its traditional garbs. It asks: why couldn’t all my beliefs hang together and yet be comprehensively false about the actual world?” (1986, 309)
I'm not.
I'm trying to explain this: — Michael
You are conflating the possibility of skepticism with skepticism. — Leontiskos
If there are unknowable truths then there are unjustifiable truths, and if there are unjustifiable truths then a proposition not being justified is not a good reason to reject it. — Michael
I gave reasons above. — Leontiskos
If there are unknowable truths then there are unjustifiable truths, and if there are unjustifiable truths then a proposition not being justified is not a good reason to reject it. — Michael
Or, "...then a proposition not being justified is not a good reason to reject it." There is an equivocation here on 'reject'. If 'reject' means falsify, then this strikes me as uncontroversial. If 'reject' means "abstain from affirming," then the consequent is false but it does not in fact follow from your premises. — Leontiskos
My suggestion is that if we cannot have evidence that we are brains in a vat then (1) does not sufficiently justify the claim that we are not brains in a vat. — Michael
This proposition is true:
1. We do not have evidence that there is no teapot orbiting the Sun
If realism is correct then this proposition is true:
2. It is possible that there is a teapot orbiting the Sun and that we cannot have evidence that there is a teapot orbiting the Sun
My suggestion is that if we cannot have evidence that there is no teapot orbiting the Sun then (1) does not sufficiently justify the claim that there is no teapot orbiting the Sun. — substitution
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.