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
Something cannot be true and false because nothing can both be and not be anything, in the same way, at the same time, without qualification. — Count Timothy von Icarus
When it comes to logic, our predicates should be univocal, and this sort of ambiguity should be ruled out. — Count Timothy von Icarus
But even for propositions like: "you had a good day," the truth of this is not reducible to a binary. Sometimes, if asked if we had a good day, we don't really know. Does this mean that there is no truth as to whether or not anyone ever has a good day? That the sentence is not truth-apt? I don't think so. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Well, the problem that I think is most acute is ascribing truth and falsity primarily to propositions. Actually, it seems that in a lot of philosophy they are the only bearers of truth. That's what leads to, IMO, bad conceptualizations of knowledge. — Count Timothy von Icarus
But I suppose my point is that contradiction in this case is used as the lens through which truth as a whole is analyzed. This leads to concepts like "the one true canonical database of all true propositions" and when concepts like this are shown to be flawed, there is a crash into deflation. Truth ends up being either univocal, and contained in "the one true set of propositions," or else entirely relativized (with some appeals to "pragmatism" as a backstop). — Count Timothy von Icarus
The second, no. — Count Timothy von Icarus
However, we can have propositions that make statements about how true something is to some ideal. "This is a good car." Does this reduce to a binary? I don't think so. Is it simply not truth-apt? I don't think this works either, because a car that won't start is in an important sense not a good car. It isn't true to its purpose. — Count Timothy von Icarus
What objectionable thesis does your opponent hold? — Leontiskos
The Univocity and Binary Nature of Truth
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I'm going to make a case against both of these assumptions. — Count Timothy von Icarus
What about the quote from the OP? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Yes, something cannot be black and not-black — Count Timothy von Icarus
Edit: For Aristotle contraries allow for an unexcluded middle, but true/false do not, therefore true/false are not contraries. Cf. Metaphysics IV.7 - 1011b23. — Leontiskos
Truth and falsity are mutually exclusive in cases where... — Count Timothy von Icarus
I always assumed Thomas's point here was pointing back to Avicenna and ontological truth. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Such propositions are true or false (there is no gradation) simpliciter. Such a view seems to require some dubious assumptions... — Count Timothy von Icarus
Truth represents a perfect adequacy between the intellect and being. Falsity is the absence of this adequacy. If any inadequacy makes a belief or statement false, that seems to be quite problematic. For one, it would mean that all or almost all of the "laws" of the natural sciences are false, along with our scientific claims.
A theory or hypothesis might not perfectly conform to reality, but this doesn't make it completely inadequate either. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Seconds, for the term "true" to have any content, it must not to apply equally to all things; falsity must be at least a possibility. For my part, it's unclear to me how we can have falseness without an intellect. For instance, stars, rocks, numbers, and trees are not true or false, but rather beliefs and statements about them are. Nor will it do to have truth and falsity be properties of "language," as isolated from any consideration of language users. Rocks do not come to know things by having truths carved into them, and in a lifeless universe of random shifting sands, a proposition that happens to be spelled out in English by pure chance means nothing to anyone. — Count Timothy von Icarus
the idea that all knowledge and belief is reducible to atomic propositions, that knowledge is the type of thing that can be atomized or is a whole that is merely the sum of its parts. — Count Timothy von Icarus
At the end of the day it is not merely sentential. Knowledge/truth is more than a set of sentences. — Leontiskos
St. Thomas makes the case for this — Count Timothy von Icarus
“opposite assertions cannot be true at the same time” (Metaph IV 6 1011b13–20) — SEP on Aristotle and Non-Contradiction
It treats the universe as sort of flat and so it tells a story that is sort of flat.
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But I don't always want a framework that doesn't distinguish eating from dancing from speaking, or leaves those distinctions optional, or builds up to them in a similarly generic way (apo). — Srap Tasmaner
I am not just speaking about war, but also diplomacy. — Bob Ross
I think we have a duty to help humans qua Justice. Our rational capacities mark us out, teleologically, as requiring of ourselves, among many other things, to be impartial, objective, and to bestow demerit and merit where it is deserved (objectively). Under my view, a human has a duty to be Just merely in virtue of being a person; and basic human rights are grounded in one’s nature as a person, and so, yes, a rational alien species would have those same basic rights. — Bob Ross
I am not arguing that we have a responsibility to take care of other nations; but we do have a responsibility to stop immoralities when they are grave enough. — Bob Ross
Under your view, I am not following why one would be obligated to even do this; as it is not their community. — Bob Ross
Under your view, is it not a just war to invade Nazi Germany? Is it not an obligation other nations would have because they have no duty to victims of another nation? — Bob Ross
Well, that’s my point: the whole of humanity is a para-community no differently. So if a person must be concerned about the pollution in their nation, then they should be concerned about it every else on planet earth. — Bob Ross
But they would still have moral obligations—no? One such obligation would be to use their excess of resources to help other persons (and then other non-person animals). No? — Bob Ross
Ultimately, your teleology as a human. You are a rational animal, which is a person. Persons must pursue truth, knowledge, honesty, open-mindness, justice, impartiality, objectivity, etc. in order to fulfill their rational telos. — Bob Ross
Yes, but I don’t think the lion is ignorant just because it lacks the sufficient ability to will in accordance with reason. My dog, e.g., wills in accordance with its own knowledge and conative dispositions all the time. — Bob Ross
So is a human bound by nature to care for its young, does that mean that a woman who takes care of her babies is not dutiful to her maternal duties? — Bob Ross
Or, perhaps, do you mean by “bound by nature” that it wills it not in accordance with its own will, but some other biological underpinning? — Bob Ross
Let’s take the most famous example of moral relativism that is a form of moral realism: Aristotelian Ethics. — Bob Ross
E.g., I would consider “I should live a virtuous life” to be a categorical imperative that is derivable from Aristotelian Ethics even though it is true relative to the Telos of living creatures. — Bob Ross
but I'm interested in why you think an atheist would need there to be UFOs to impart meaning on their lives and why you think theists would lose something if they accepted that UFOs existed. — Hanover
Neither one really believes that we are all alone. — Leontiskos
UFOs and bigfoot could exist under our current concept of physics and scientific reality. Gods and angels, not so much. — Hanover
I think that's probably why atheists can better accept UFOs and fundamentalists cannot. — Hanover
I wondered about that, but this article says religious people are less likely to believe in UFOs than are atheists. — Hanover
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
Meanwhile, drones fly over NJ and no one is entitled to an explanation. — Hanover
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
I mean, I know such arguments are unfavored here, but you don't actually know anything about what does or does not happen after death minus what a 2 year old can observe and comment on. — Outlander
I see what you are saying, but if Aquinas is just noting that no man can punish another who is not in their jurisdiction (to do so) but that they can restrain or stop a person from doing wrong; then this does not, per se, negate my point since invading a nation like North Korea is done primarily for stopping them—not punishing them. — Bob Ross
I thought you were saying, by way of Aquinas, that a nation cannot invade another nation to stop them from doing immoral things to their own people because that nation has no jurisdiction over the other one (and thusly no duty to do it). That’s inherently about the legal system: the jurisdiction that they don’t have is purely legal—no?
Likewise, the polis is about legal jurisdiction: it is the city-state. — Bob Ross
It arises out of the roles an agent has within that teleological structure—e.g., a good dad, a good son, a good mother, a good police officer, a good firefighter, a good judge, etc. — Bob Ross
...I should care about the cleanliness of the water on the whole planet for the sake of the entire moral project (which is to properly respect life in a nutshell).
I don’t just have a duty to clean the water for my own ‘community’ (as you mean it) but, rather, to preserve the human good and the good of all life—don’t you agree? If you see a polluted stream that you knew with 100% certainty wouldn’t pose any threat to your community but would to another, then you think you have no moral obligation, ceteris paribus, to do something about it? The human good (in terms of as a whole) doesn’t bind you at all—just the communal good? — Bob Ross
Not quite, this is, again, the straw man that I am arguing that every human is obligated to do the impossible; but I am saying that human’s have duties to the human race—not just their own nation. — Bob Ross
A nation wouldn’t be a community then: they aren’t self-sufficient. They have to trade with other nations. — Bob Ross
I don’t think so. For you, would you say that if you didn’t require the resources of anyone else in your nation (and thereby were living completely self-sufficiently), then you have no obligations to help other people? What if you are filthy rich and completely self-sufficient and there are people that are starving? It seems like under your view there would be no duty or obligation to help them because there is no interdependence. — Bob Ross
I don’t remember how I initially presented the principle, but it might have been. What I am saying is that there are duties which arise out of the roles one has in a teleological structure, some of which can be morally relevant, and that those duties do extend to the entirety of the moral project [of respecting life—Justice and Fairness]. — Bob Ross
I used that example of purpose in anticipation (;
If I am right that duties arise out of the roles derived from the teleological structure and duty is living in proper agreement with those roles and being dutiful is fulfilling one’s duties, then a lion is dutiful if the lion is fulfilling its roles within the teleological structure of being a lion—e.g., a good father lion, etc.
Voluntariness and choice are not the same thing—given that I take the Aristotelian approach here—and duty is just acting in alignment with one’s obligations; which can be done voluntarily without choice. — Bob Ross
If they are a chess player, then they are bound to follow the rules. Sure, they can decide to become a chess player or not, but that doesn’t make the goodness, badness, and dutifulness which is relative to that teleological structure a hypothetical imperative for a chess player. — Bob Ross
If I take your argument seriously, then it sounds like all forms of moral relativism must express merely hypothetical imperatives. — Bob Ross
1. One cannot reprimand a person which one has no jurisdiction over.
2. One can reprimand a person which is doing something unlawful. — Bob Ross
Then we are not restricting ‘duty’ to its strict meaning as it relates to law — Bob Ross
The question, then, becomes: “what kinds of teleological structures can support duties?” — Bob Ross
If I were to grant that one such set of moral duties relates to the teleological structure of ‘community’, then it seems to plainly follow that the entire human species, as a whole, is the highest of this type of structure as it relates to humans — Bob Ross
Perhaps the argument is not that because they are so distant to each other that they are not proper communities but, rather,... — Bob Ross
I wouldn’t say that one must oppose all the immorality that they can per se: one should oppose all immorality that they can as it relates to their duties. — Bob Ross
The difference between us, is that I think of duties as relating to many teleological structures, whereas yours seems to be limited to legal structures. — Bob Ross
So, what teleological structures can support duties? I would argue: all of them! Just as all teleological structures can and do support objective, internal goods to and for the given structure; so, too, does it house duties which relate to the preservation and realization of the purposes in those structures. E.g., just as there is such a thing as a good lion, there is such a thing as a dutiful lion. — Bob Ross
Surely, e.g., a dutiful lion is not morally relevant, for the lion cannot rationally deliberate (in any meaningful sense). — Bob Ross
Doesn’t, e.g., a chess player have certain chess duties (such as not cheating to win) even though they are not directly morally relevant duties? — Bob Ross
Dare We Say, ‘Thanks for Nothing’? — FrankGSterleJr
Sure, I just think the extreme cases are useful to demonstrate how it is implausible, from the perspective of almost any ethics, that we always benefit most from extending our own lives. — Count Timothy von Icarus
The drive of beings to maintain their own form is absolute nowhere in nature. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Nor is the case of dying in this way really sui generis. We often take on all sorts of risk and suffering to accomplish goals. The duties that come with being a parent, learning to ride a bike, learning to read, starting an exercise regime or diet, etc. can all be unpleasant and risky, and yet it seems hard to claim that this entails that they cannot be to our benefit. The daily self-reported "happiness" of parents of young children is significantly lower on average, for years out, but I don't think this makes having children necessarily not to one's benefit. — Count Timothy von Icarus
It's the demand for a univocal measure of the good that leads towards such rigid pronouncements as "it is never to our benefit to do something that kills us." — Count Timothy von Icarus
I wonder however you arrived at this? Name calling too. That's called strange. — Tom Storm
For example, why do we prohibit cocaine as a society? — Leontiskos
Because it's generally bad to have one's grandchildren die. The one act, saving the kids, might entail dying. Which is to be preferred? The claim that it is simply impossible to rightly prize any goals more than temporarily extending one's (necessarily finite) mortal life seems like one that it will be very hard to justify. — Count Timothy von Icarus
People ask not to receive medical treatment all the time. — Count Timothy von Icarus
If a grandmother attempts to save her grandchildren, and will die in the process of successfully rescuing them, it hardly seems clear that this cannot be to her benefit either. — Count Timothy von Icarus
And this might well be true, but it shows that life is not ultimately sought for its own sake, but rather as a prerequisite for other goods. — Count Timothy von Icarus
If J told his followers to go out among the gentiles/the nations and eat what they serve you then I cannot view that as anything other than permission to break Torah law regarding diet. — BitconnectCarlos
It could be that, but there are alternative interpretations, namely the avoidance of being fussy when receiving hospitality, and ignoring the additional food laws imposed by the "traditions of the elders." — Leontiskos
But as Count Timothy von Icarus notes by gJohn we have J instructing his followers to dine on his blood and flesh -- clearly prohibited by the Torah. — BitconnectCarlos
Sure, the distinction between pleasure and happiness is alive and relatively well presently, insofar as pleasure is the primary conception of the singular positive feeling, happiness being one of many subsumed under it. Right? Is that what you’re getting at? — Mww
This is a very interesting take, that I would like to explore more. — Bob Ross
I think you are right here: the firefighter’s duty would be to help put out fires and help people vacant the premises—not necessarily to save everyone. — Bob Ross
So what about the man that watched that woman get kidnapped? It seems like your view leaves no room for moral obligation to help people outside of the strict, institutionalized sense of duty. — Bob Ross
In fact, wouldn’t it follow that—not only was the man permitted to just stand there and watch but—he was not permitted to stop it since, according to your Thomistic take, he has no jurisdiction to reprimand a fellow unwilling citizen? — Bob Ross
Reply to Objection 3. It is lawful for anyone to restrain a man for a time from doing some unlawful deed there and then: as when a man prevents another from throwing himself over a precipice, or from striking another. — Aquinas, ST II-II.65.3.ad3
If we speak of good and evil in general, it belongs to every virtue to do good and to avoid evil: and in this sense they cannot be reckoned parts of justice, except justice be taken in the sense of "all virtue" [Cf. II-II:58:5]. And yet even if justice be taken in this sense it regards a certain special aspect of good; namely, the good as due in respect of Divine or human law.
On the other hand justice considered as a special virtue regards good as due to one's neighbor. And in this sense it belongs to special justice to do good considered as due to one's neighbor, and to avoid the opposite evil, that, namely, which is hurtful to one's neighbor; while it belongs to general justice to do good in relation to the community or in relation to God, and to avoid the opposite evil. — Aquinas, ST II-II.79.1 - Whether to decline from evil and to do good are parts of justice?
Objection 1. It would seem that we are not bound to do good to all. For Augustine says (De Doctr. Christ. i, 28) that we "are unable to do good to everyone." Now virtue does not incline one to the impossible. Therefore it is not necessary to do good to all.
Reply to Objection 1. Absolutely speaking it is impossible to do good to every single one: yet it is true of each individual that one may be bound to do good to him in some particular case. Hence charity binds us, though not actually doing good to someone, to be prepared in mind to do good to anyone if we have time to spare. There is however a good that we can do to all, if not to each individual, at least to all in general, as when we pray for all, for unbelievers as well as for the faithful. — Aquinas ST II-II.31.2.ad1 - Whether we ought to do good to all?
I answer that, Grace and virtue imitate the order of nature, which is established by Divine wisdom. Now the order of nature is such that every natural agent pours forth its activity first and most of all on the things which are nearest to it: thus fire heats most what is next to it. In like manner God pours forth the gifts of His goodness first and most plentifully on the substances which are nearest to Him, as Dionysius declares (Coel. Hier. vii). But the bestowal of benefits is an act of charity towards others. Therefore we ought to be most beneficent towards those who are most closely connected with us.
Now one man's connection with another may be measured in reference to the various matters in which men are engaged together; (thus the intercourse of kinsmen is in natural matters, that of fellow-citizens is in civic matters, that of the faithful is in spiritual matters, and so forth): and various benefits should be conferred in various ways according to these various connections, because we ought in preference to bestow on each one such benefits as pertain to the matter in which, speaking simply, he is most closely connected with us. And yet this may vary according to the various requirements of time, place, or matter in hand: because in certain cases one ought, for instance, to succor a stranger, in extreme necessity, rather than one's own father, if he is not in such urgent need. — Aquinas II-II.31.3 - Whether we ought to do good to those rather who are more closely united to us?
True enough. ↪Bob Ross and I understand the symbiosis on the one hand and the conceptual evolution on the other. — Mww