Oh, that's not my understanding of the deflationary position at all (which, for me, is admittedly mostly from reading Ramsey). Do you have to hand any sources you use for yours? — Isaac
But this is more or less a correspondence view of truth — Isaac
It also follows from the above argument that Moorean propositions are not propositions at all, since they have no truth value — Sam26
No, it doesn't, unless one also adopts an anti-realist view that is not found in Wittgenstein. Hence ↪Seppo is correct. Conflating knowledge and truth is an error. Wittgenstein is saying that Moore's knowledge claimed are not incorrect because they are not true, but because they are unjustified. — Banno
You were just repeating what praxis said — Isaac
So which actual person in this thread has made those claims? — Isaac
Or are we just going to wave our little flags so everyone is quite sure which gang we belong to ... Sure, here goes...
Don't you just hate Nazis, with their antisemitism and warmongering? Grrr! — Isaac
Of course there about justification. — Sam26
(1) If knowledge claims are necessarily about the process of arriving at truth, then Moorean propositions are necessarily about truth claims. — Sam26
(2) If Moorean propositions are about truth claims, then necessarily W.'s attack is an attack on the truth of Moorean propositions. — Sam26
Right. Good catch. That's the hypocrisy of some imaginary interlocutors well and truly exposed, I'm sure we can all vividly imagine them scuttling back to their imaginary holes and keeping their imaginary opinions to their imaginary selves from now on. Well played. — Isaac
I wonder if you've anything to say in response to the actual interlocutors who are actually writing posts on this actual thread? — Isaac
It’s funny that many of those who whine the loudest about cancel culture believe that a capitalist society should be self-regulating. Isn’t cancel culture the ideal of this philosophy? Probably only when it works in their favor, I imagine. — praxis
I think my answer was clear. They are. — Fooloso4
The question is whether all hinges should be regarded as propositional. — Fooloso4
Moyal-Sharrock uses "Hinge certainties", a small improvement over "Hinge propositions", although to my eye a certainty is propositional. — Banno
The fact that something can be stated as a proposition does not mean that all hinges are propositional, or should be analyzed in terms of propositions. — Fooloso4
As stated this is misleading. It not not that they are neither true nor false, but rather that the question of their being true is not there from the beginning. When a baby takes its first steps it is either true or false that the floor or ground will support their weight, but such a consideration does not come into play. — Fooloso4
It remains to be demonstrated that siamese cats are of the same type as cats in general. — Banno
Only that your statements seem to be based on belief rather than fact. — Apollodorus
That would depend on how they differ. You cannot just assume that they are the same in the respect of being the same. — Luke
Right, he never uses the phrase "hinge propositions"... but, as I have already pointed out, and you either ignored and forgot, he does refer to them as "propositions". So, they have a truth-value. Because having a truth-value is to propositions what having three sides is to triangles.Wittgenstein never called them "hinge propositions". — Luke
Apparently you have no interest in discussing whether or not hinge propositions are propositions, or in discussing Wittgenstein's work. — Luke
Now I fall back on argument from theory: theory can't be conclusively proven, but rather must ever withstand new onslaughts as they arise, as with Newtonian Physics. — ucarr
If hinge propositions are different from "propositions in general", then hinge propositions need not bear a truth-value. — Luke
If one says numbers are discovered, then such person lands somewhere in the vicinity of the objective idealism camp. — ucarr
The two above choices pose a problem for the atheist because any type of idealism, being, cognitively speaking, the express lane to theism — ucarr
Talking specifically, this means there can be no wholesale, set-theoretical refutation of all possible theisms. — ucarr
Therefore, atheism, like theism, is an article of faith. — ucarr
Sufficiency of being requires transcendence of being & transcendence of self across a spectrum that incorporates the empirical universe & the transcendent Logos of deity. — ucarr
This part is quite exiting: "anti-Christian activists like yourself cite other anti-Christian activists like Ehrman as their "eminent authority". You aren't fooling anyone." — Paine
Well, you are using scripture as "evidence" for your arguments, aren't you? :grin: — Apollodorus
Accepting that the scriptures say something obviously isn't the same thing as accepting the thing it says. — Seppo
1. IMO it is entirely conceivable for a peasant to become king. Joseph was a slave and became second-in-command after the Pharaoh, which after all is much higher than a Hebrew king. — Apollodorus
Clearly, not everyone thought he was a peasant. So, on what scientific basis are you accepting religious narratives claiming he was a "peasant" and rejecting religious narratives claiming he was of royal descent? — Apollodorus
The concept as a Type of deity (e.g. theism) can be shown to be empty, establishing every Token of that deity Type (e.g. Allah, YHWH, Zeus) as imaginary — 180 Proof
Clearly, you didn't think that question through, because "uncritically accept religious narratives" is exactly what you are doing - when it suits you: — Apollodorus
And you seem to be oblivious to the fact that most original Christians were Jews and that they succeeded in converting other Jews, including Paul himself! — Apollodorus
Jesus's closest disciples were Jews. The earliest Christians were those disciples, and their friends and family that they managed to convert... also mostly Jewish, probably. — Seppo
1. If he was a "peasant", so were most other Jews. So, why would peasants look down on other peasants??? — Apollodorus
2. In the NT Jesus is addressed or referred to by the title of "teacher" many times, so clearly not everyone considered him a "peasant"! — Apollodorus
I don't think "some people praised this person, therefore everything this person says is right" is any better. — Apollodorus
It looks like you not only uncritically accept religious narratives (when it suits your agenda), but also uncritically accept the dogmatic narratives of dodgy scholars .... — Apollodorus
The misconceptions around propositions are odd, and appear to be becoming more common — Banno
What's wrong with the argument? — Luke
Well, it's a well-known fact that Ehrman woz there. And with eye-witnesses like him, who needs scholars, right? — Apollodorus
So, Jews were not common in Roman Palestine? — Apollodorus
Sorry, but I don't think Ehrman is "relevant scholarship" at all. The truth of the matter is that his theories have been widely criticized by Christians and scholars in general: — Apollodorus
He wasn't "left to rot and thrown into an unmarked mass grave" at all. — Apollodorus
If Jesus had disciples among the Sanhedrin who did not consider him as "cursed", there is no logical reason why he couldn't have had disciples among the common people. — Apollodorus
Plus, there is no evidence that he was a "peasant". — Apollodorus
So, I don't think it is quite the way you are describing it — Apollodorus