You are headed to absurdity, forced to conclude that the number of true additions is finite, since it is limited to only those that have been uttered. — Banno
But you are saying it wrong. — Banno
Note specifically that a proposition being mind-dependent does not entail that its truth value is mind-dependent, which I think is where frank is making his mistake. — Michael
Does that really address any of the issues? — Leontiskos
For example, how is the question about the metaphysical status of truth the same as the debates of representationalism?
And I don't see anyone disputing the idea that "there are mutual constraints of world and word." — Leontiskos
When you move to a world where there are no humans, the bridge breaks. — fdrake
So roughly, I don't think sentences "bear" truth in the sense required for this debate. It's the norms of use, and we coordinate those by using them in circumstances, and they leave a lot imprecise and unsaid. — fdrake
I think even if sentences don't carry truth like a payload, they still ought to be truth-directed and truth-directing. — Srap Tasmaner
I keep finding myself thinking that the great value of saying something true to someone else is helping them see it ― like when you point out to someone that a photo of the faculty of your department has no women in it. — Srap Tasmaner
I think even if sentences don't carry truth like a payload, they still ought to be truth-directed and truth-directing. — Srap Tasmaner
That there are unborn babies just is that new babies will be born in the future, and so that there are unuttered propositions just is that new propositions will be uttered in the future, consistent with everything I have been saying. — Michael
Truth as a process. — fdrake
Truth (as a concept) definitely seems to play a privileged coordinating role, even if you grant that it's all coordinating norms. — fdrake
But I was saying something stronger: we don't so much tell the truth as reveal it, or at least do our part in revealing it. Here's that metaphor taken literally: there is a curtain hiding the facts; I pull it back on my side so that you can begin to see what's behind it, and if you pull the rest on your side, things as they are stand revealed. ― Now, maybe it's best to admit we never quite get the curtain pulled all the way clear, maybe in fact all we get are glimpses now and then when we manage a gap in the curtains, but those glimpses are real and what we see and understand is reality to that degree revealed. — Srap Tasmaner
Alright, I'm beating this to death, which is too bad because I think there are limitations to the seeing business, and very often what we really need and share with each other is narrative, — Srap Tasmaner
but it truth is never truth only from a particular perspective. — Srap Tasmaner
And so the issue is forced into a juxtaposition. Better to ask how propositions are dependent on mind, and how they are dependent on the world.The first concerns the dispute between platonism and conceptualism – are propositions mind-independent or not? — Michael
Which proposition? Why assume there to be one answer for all propositions? Better to ask which propositions are verification-transcendent (a dreadful phrase), an even better to ask what verification is.is a proposition’s truth value verification-transcendent or not? — Michael
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