The anti-realist (at least of Dummett's kind) says that if a sentence is true then it's possible to know that it's true (subject to the appropriate restrictions as per Fitch's paradox), whereas the realist allows for the possibility that some true sentences are unknowably true. — Michael
you don't think P is true until someone expresses P. — frank
I also don't think that a painting is accurate until someone has painted it. But that's because a painting being accurate (or inaccurate) before it is painted makes no sense. Just as a sentence being true (or false) before it is said makes no sense.
This isn't truth skepticism. — Michael
It is. A truth realist believes there are truths which have never been uttered. — frank
North American ones are ugly — frank
Just as a sentence being true (or false) before it is said makes no sense. — Michael
What are the chances that anyone has ever said that 799168003115 + 193637359638 = 992805362753? — Srap Tasmaner
Perhaps the word "it" refers to the fact that 799168003115 + 193637359638 = 992805362753? I don't think that facts are the sort of thing that can be true or false, i.e. it's a category error to say that the fact that 1 + 1 = 2 is true. And what if I were to assert the false sentence "1 + 1 = 3"? Was it false before I said it? But the word "it" here can't refer to the fact that 1 + 1 = 3 because 1 + 1 does not equal 3. — Michael
And what if I were to assert the false sentence "1 + 1 = 3"? Was it false before I said it? But the word "it" here can't refer to the fact that 1 + 1 = 3 because 1 + 1 does not equal 3. — Michael
A platonist does, but I don't think that a realist must be a platonist. A realist can be a non-platonist by accepting that only the things we say are true or false but that some of the things we say are unknowably true or false. — Michael
I don't care too much about which account is true, they both seem like cromulent ways of doing business. It's just two ways of answering "If a tree falls in the forest and no one hears it does it make a sound...", Michael says no or "mu" or "cannot compute", Banno says yes, in ye olde page 2-10 @Leontiskos sort of says "yes, because God hears it" and @Wayfarer sort of says "no, because what it means to be a sound is to be heard". — fdrake
You pointed it up in Michael quite well, but to be complete you should also be willing to give your own view. — Leontiskos
That's pretty explicitly the quantificational interpretation. The "it" in "...it was true before you said it" is the sentence, which is a first order predication, and predicating truth to "it" is a second order predication. That's fine and dandy, so long as you keep this in mind.What does the word "it" here refer to? — Michael
It would be worthwhile discussing whether there is anything more to the fact that 799168003115 + 193637359638 = 992805362753 than how the sentence "99168003115 + 193637359638 = 992805362753" ought be interpreted. — fdrake
No need to invoke god here. We do make the predicate, and the constant symbol.Even if we say God invented the constant symbols we still have to make the predicates. — fdrake
The notion that a truth-bearer is a thing in a world is quite problematic. @Michael apparently thinks truth bearers are utterances, and so events in a particular world - this despite calling them "sentences". That's one way to interpret them, but it brings wth it a whole gamete of issues. It seems to be dropping transword identification, for a start. The moon is still the moon regardless of whether a man from the USA or the USSR first stood on it. The T_@ and T_R business is bypassed by adopting an extensional, substitutional interpretation. We are back to the very direct point that in a world in which everything remains the same, except that there are no people, there will, by the very stipulation given, still be gold in those hills; and if there is gold in those hills, then the second order predication "There is gold in those hills" is true, even if never uttered....what's at stake is whether it makes sense to be able to form it in that world. — fdrake
Just to be clear, Banno says that you can go either way, saying that the tree makes a noise and dealing with the consequences, or saying that it doesn't, and dealing with a different set of consequences.Banno says yes — fdrake
Nice word....cromulent... — fdrake
the second order predication "There is gold in those hills" is true, even if never uttered. — Banno
I'll stop you there and point out that a predication isn't an individual sentence; it is not just an utterance. If I point out again that 1+1=2, I am pointing out something that I said in the previous post, and that you said in the one before that.This second order predication is still a sentence... — Michael
And moreover, it's not an error to say that the fact that 1 + 1 = 2 is true, it's just redundant. — Banno
There is a reason we have different words for utterance, sentence, statement, proposition, predication...
Which of these is true? Any of them. — Banno
I'm not surprised.I don't see how that answers my question. — Michael
You didn't address the argument, which is that different utterances are understood as saying the same thing; therefore what they say is not peculiar to an individual utterance. — Banno
The claim that there are true and false propositions even if nothing is being said is incoherent. — Michael
And yet ↪Srap Tasmaner showed you an example that negates your assertion. — Banno
But utterances and propositions are not the very same. — Banno
No he didn't. — Michael
This is a conflation of seperate issues. If you would read my posts. There are unuttered propositions. Srap showed this by uttering one. The only alternative is for you to claim that 799168003115 + 193637359638 = 992805362753 was not a proposition, and also not true, until Srap made it so by uttering it. But that is just to misunderstand addition.I'm saying that if there are no utterances then there are no propositions, i.e. that platonism is wrong. — Michael
Michael says no or "mu" or "cannot compute" — fdrake
Largely pointless pseudoproblem conjured by insisting upon the meaning of sentences being separate from but mirroring the world they engage with. It's ye olde how does the representation correspond to the represented but with sentences. IMO there isn't a correspondence or symmetry of content, there's mutual constraints of word and world, so I don't care much. — fdrake
There are unuttered propositions. — Banno
Srap showed this by uttering one. — Banno
The only alternative is for you to claim that 799168003115 + 193637359638 = 992805362753 was not true until Srap made it so by uttering it. — Banno
And yet Srap showed that it is so. I'll count this as progress.Only in the trivial sense that there are unborn babies. — Michael
Of course you can. Show, not say.You can't show that there are unuttered propositions by uttering a proposition — Michael
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