That is where strength comes from, practise. — Metaphysician Undercover
So I can see the motivation for wanting another theory of truth aside from correspondence. I just haven't found that bridge into the topic which makes it easy for me to make heads or tails of. — Moliere
(Entailment-T)
a truth-maker is a thing the very existence of which entails that something is true.
So x is a truth-maker for a truth p iff x exists and another representation that says x exists entails the representation that p. It is an attraction of this principle that the key notion it deploys, namely entailment, is ubiquitous, unavoidable and enjoys a rich life outside philosophy—both in ordinary life and in scientific and mathematical practice. — SEP article on truthmakers
I have in mind the idea that different statements--in different languages, even--can express the same proposition. I can even express a proposition without using words at all--e.g., holding out a gift-wrapped box is not a statement, but it can indicate (in a certain context) that I am giving you a present. — aletheist
Justification has precious little to do with truth, on my view. Sure, insofar that we want to know we want to believe what is true. But justification has to do with belief and persuasion more than truth. — Moliere
Yea.. taken in the right way, I think you may be right. There's a wrong way to take it, though. That's all I was saying.That, in itself in my mind, offers quite possibly the best protection from mental illness as well as all the other things life can throw at ya — Agustino
Who says they have to be like the men are to be worthy? — Agustino
I ask you and expect you to answer, — Agustino
Have you ever read Nassim Taleb's Anti-Fragile? — Agustino
Ever heard of Stephen Covey? When I worked for AT&T, everybody in management had to take a Covey course. I was taken in by it at first. It's actually very similar to the founding principle of Zen. There's a fly in the ointment. I'll share it with you in PM if you're interested. Bottom line: failure is supposed to hurt. It's supposed to bring you to your knees. That's what makes you stop and learn something. People who don't go through that pain are ego-maniacs. They'll fail over and over because they can't learn.So what then are the essential elements of worldview and self-conception, according to you, that enable a positive reaction to failure? — Agustino
OK. Practice without a license if you want. If you aren't an ego-maniac you'll discover the downside to that. :)Given more time than 10 minutes, person X could use that information to alter his sense of self - or perceive why such an alteration would be beneficial to him. — Agustino
What do you think about people who fail to live up to their own standards? Don't you think they are also more prone to mental illness? — Agustino
Really? I thought it's primary weakness is that it falls back on Correspondence.Haha, oh--well, I wouldn't say that realism implies any particular epistemological view. — Terrapin Station
I think the easiest way to understand the independence of things is with reference to Dummett's account of realism and anti-realism. If the truth of "X exists" is verification transcendent than X is an independent thing, and if it isn't then it isn't. — Michael
And to say that a cause is physical is to say that the causal object/process is made of physical stuff? — Michael