You'll probably claim that it's your opponents who are equivocating T_I with T_R, your opponents will claim you're equivocating T_R with T_I, and IMO everyone's right, but no one's actually arguing about what they disagree about. — fdrake
Your T_@ behaves the same as their T_R, so your T_@ entails their T_R — fdrake
Maybe the issue is that you and I have very different interpretations of the difference between truth in a world and truth at a world.
All I mean is to make this distinction:
1. Something true can be said about a world without language (truth at a world)
2. Nothing true can be said in a world without language (truth in a world)
And if platonism is incorrect then saying something true or false is all there is to truth and falsity – there are no mind-independent abstract truth-bearers. — Michael
Moreover, your opponents are arguing that to be true is to be true in a world - I think that's what you see it as anyway. And you say that this entails a platonism, like it's a bad thing? — fdrake
Now it's not incoherent, it's simply platonist. — fdrake
But truth at a world has the same trans-world property that made truth in a world incoherent, for you, with regard to truths. — fdrake
I don't understand this. T — Michael
There's gold in A. There's gold in A-H. Gold is an entity in both of their domains.
"There is gold" is true at A, "There is gold" is true at A-H.
"There is gold" is true in A. "There is gold" is false in A-H.
Make sense so far? — fdrake
In addition, imagine who could possibly make the speech act that "There is gold" is true at A-H. — fdrake
there's no one with language in A-H. — fdrake
"There is gold" is true in A. "There is gold" doesn't exist in A-H. — Michael
You're doing it right now. — Michael
Which isn't to say that it's false, it's to say that it's not there. — fdrake
But Oooo, that implies that there are propositions floating around...! And so the paraphernalia of "in a world" and "at a world" is dreamt up in order to to ward off Plato.The proposition that there are rocks, which we denote <there are rocks>, does not entail the existence of any beings that have or are capable of having mental states. It entails this neither in a strictly or broadly logical sense. That is, it is possible in the broadest sense for <there are rocks> to be true in the absence of all mental states. But now, if this proposition is possibly true in the absence of mental states, then it possibly exists in the absence of all mental states, and so is mind-independent. This is an easy argument for the mind-independence of at least some propositions. — 7.1 Easy Arguments: Mind-Independence and Abstractness
This invokes the existence of a new entity, the proposition, in the world in question. I hope that what I've set out above shows how this is an error, that {a} will be a member of {a,c} in w regardless of whether or not there is also language in w.I'm only saying that truth is a property of propositions and that there are no true propositions (truths) in a world without language (i.e inside the World B circle). There are also no false propositions (falsehoods) in a world without language. — Michael
This invokes the existence of a new entity, the proposition, in the word in question. — Banno
Your suggestion that there are truths in World B even though nothing true is being said in World B makes no sense — Michael
Hence what we say is not all there is to truth and falsity. There is, in addition, what is the case. — Banno
or was trivial, all along. — Banno
Cheers, ↪fdrake. Thanks for chiming in. — Banno
The alternative I offered, a few pages back, is that there are indeed propositions floating around, but that they are harmless. Extensionally, all we have are individuals, a,b,c... These we name, "a", "b","c"... Then we group them: {a,c}, {b}. Then we name the groups: f={a,c}. Then we form propositions, f(a), f(b). Here, some folk, perhaps Michael, think that we have introduced a new thing into the world — the proposition f(a) — and so need the paraphernalia of "in a world" and "at a world" in order to avoid invoking Platonic forms. — Banno
An yet {a} is still a member of {a,c}, even if there is no one in the world to say it. — Banno
The platonist places true and false propositions inside the World B circle even though there's nobody in World B to say those things, and I don't think that makes any sense. — Michael
As it stands, I have no clear idea of what the point you were attempting to make was. My apologies for attempting to take you seriously.
I will try not to do it again. — Banno
What some are saying is that "a truth" means "a true proposition" and "a falsehood" means "a false proposition", that a proposition requires a language, and that a language requires a mind.
This is not to say that a mind is sufficient; only that it is necessary. The (often mind-independent) thing that the proposition describes is also necessary (to determine whether or not the proposition is a truth or a falsehood).
So the claim is that when all life dies out there will be gold in Boorara but no truths or falsehoods because there will be no propositions. — Michael
This line of discussion started from this comment of mine: — Michael
??For "A world without any minds", isn't it true at the very least that there are no minds?
So we have at least one truth. — Banno
Is it true that there are no minds in world B? — Banno
But this sentence wasn't true before you uttered it, right? — frank
That's truth anti-realism. A truth realist would say it was true before you said it. — frank
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