As the T-schema doesn't give the intension of "snow is white", then it doesn't allow translation between "snow is white" and "schnee ist weiss". — RussellA
If I understand what you're after, because the meaning of denoting (designating) is central to Tarski's Semantic Theory of Truth. — RussellA
How exactly does "snow" denote snow ?
In the ordinary sense, "snow" denotes snow because "snow" denotes snow. — RussellA
This means that unless we are absolutely certain, we ought not call something "knowledge", because it could turn out not to be knowledge. — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you not agree that as epistemologists, if there is a possibility that the thing which appears to be knowledge is not actually knowledge, then we ought not call it "knowledge"? — Metaphysician Undercover
So my argument is that if it has to be actually raining out for us to correctly call what Alice has "knowledge", (as Andrew asserts), then we ought not label what Alice has as "knowledge" unless we are certain that it is raining out. — Metaphysician Undercover
Now to say that the rock exists is not to say something about the rock. Existence is not a predicate in the way being granite is. — Banno
That fairies exist is that ∃xFx, where Fx means "x is a fairy". If ¬∃xFx then fairies do not exist. Some x is my nose but no x is a fairy, therefore my nose exists but fairies don't.
All this to return to the answer to your question: It is true that the rock existed yesterday. — Banno
Mind independence is simply what "real" means. What is your problem with this definition? — hypericin
Michael’s reasoning attempts to make us believe that a President must follow “established procedures” as outlined by another president’s executive order — NOS4A2
and that the lower courts get to decide what the leader of the entire American military can and cannot declassify — NOS4A2
This is an assumption. You can invite people to share your assumptions, but you can't really bang them over the head with them. Assumptions have no weight. — frank
Then your hypothetical does squat, as Srap says, toward justifying your claim. We still cannot ever correctly judge that what Alice has is "knowledge", in the real world, because any such judgements could always turn out to be incorrect. Your example only applies to a hypothetical world, in which it actually is raining. What good is it, if it doesn't apply to the real world? — Metaphysician Undercover
“Established procedure” is that the president is the ultimate authority on classified materials and can declassify at will. — NOS4A2
The president can do whatever he wants with classified documents. — NOS4A2
There doesn’t have to be (a process), as I understand it. If you’re the president of the United States, you can declasify just by saying ‘it’s declassified’, even by thinking about it. Because you’re sending it to Mar-a-Lago or to wherever you’re sending it.
Declassification cannot occur unless designated officials follow specified procedures.
...
Because declassification, even by the President, must follow established procedures, that argument fails.
To make a different analogy, if a pointer is measured to be pointing North along the North-South axis, then what direction is it pointing along the West-East axis? — Andrew M
You seem to be asserting that a thing which a person might name as a triangle, has an independent property, which you call "being a triangle", which is separate from being named a triangle. How could you justify such a claim? — Metaphysician Undercover
A "property" is a concept — Metaphysician Undercover
This is how "truth" is most commonly used. When someone is asked to tell the truth, the person is asked to state what they honestly believe. — Metaphysician Undercover
What is "a number"? Are you taking a position of Platonic realism here? — Metaphysician Undercover
How do you honestly believe that there are objects called "triangles" which have never been called by that name?
The issue is, that the thing must be judged to be of that kind. because a "kind" is something artificial, created by human minds, a category. A natural object isn't just automatically of this kind or that kind, because it must fulfill a set list of criteria in order to be of any specific kind. And, whether or not something fulfills a list of criteria is a judgment.
This does not tell us whether "there are 66 coins" is the product of a judgement, or whether it's something independent from judgement. Nor does it tell us if there is 66, or 67 coins. It really tells us nothing. It is a useless statement. — Metaphysician Undercover
In any event, at least for these purposes, the declassification argument is a red herring because declassifying an official document would not change its content or render it personal. So even if we assumed that Plaintiff did declassify some or all of the documents, that would not explain why he has a personal interest in them.
Here, the district court concluded that Plaintiff did not show that the United States acted in callous disregard of his constitutional rights. Doc. No. 64 at 9. No party contests the district court’s finding in this regard. The absence of this “indispensab[le]” factor in the Richey analysis is reason enough to conclude that the district court abused its discretion in exercising equitable jurisdiction here.
New York Attorney General Letitia James filed a lawsuit Wednesday accusing former president Donald Trump, three of his grown children and executives at his company of flagrantly manipulating property valuations to deceive lenders, insurance brokers and tax authorities into giving them better rates on bank loans and insurance policies and to reduce their tax liability.
The 222-page civil complaint asks the New York Supreme Court to bar Trump, as well as Donald Trump Jr., Ivanka Trump and Eric Trump, from serving as executives at any company in New York, and to bar the Trump Organization from acquiring any commercial real estate or receiving loans from any New York-registered financial institution for five years.
It seeks to recover more than $250 million in what James’s office says are ill-gotten gains received through the alleged deceptive practices. While the lawsuit itself is not a criminal prosecution, James (D) said she has referred possible violations of federal law to the Justice Department and the IRS.
You seem to be saying that the numeral "66" is already related to the coins, prior to being counted — Metaphysician Undercover
For there to be "66 coins in the jar", it is necessary that "66" is the symbol which has been associated with the quantity of coins in the jar. You seem to think that the symbol "66" is somehow magically associated with the coins in the jar, without anyone making that association. How do you believe that this comes about, that the symbol "66" is related to the coins in the jar, without someone making that relation? — Metaphysician Undercover
Truth alone cannot resolve contradictions, because two people will both insist on knowing "the truth", even though they contradict each other. — Metaphysician Undercover
Going back to your own question, "Can something be said of the rock of yesterday or tomorrow?", the answer remains "yes". — Banno
In your sense, fairies on mars exist as much as my nose. — hypericin
Yep. Both may be the. subject of a predicate. — Banno
Of all the philosophical ubiquities, the most tedious is "does such-and-such really exist?"
Yes, it does, since you are talking about it. — Banno
To say "This rock exists" is saying something about the rock. Can this same something be said of the rock of yesterday or tomorrow? — hypericin
There is no number assigned to the supposed quantity within the jar, until the coins are counted — Metaphysician Undercover
There is no number already assigned to the coins prior to being counted, just like there is no location already assigned to the electron prior to being determined. — Metaphysician Undercover
Now do you honestly believe that a particular number has already been singled out, and related to the quantity of coins in the jar, prior to them being counted? — Metaphysician Undercover
But until someone does, there is no such thing as the number of coins in the jar. — Metaphysician Undercover
You are just begging the question Michael. — Metaphysician Undercover
The fact that this is a mistake is fully exposed in quantum mechanics. The particle's location really is not determined before the process of determination, and it is obviously mistaken to think that it is. Therefore it is only the process of determination (the act of measurement) which can determine "the correct answer". — Metaphysician Undercover
An "answer" is something stated as a reply to a question. If no one has counted the coins, and it was not determined at the time of placing the coins in the jar, and the jar has been watched, then no one knows how many there are, and no one has stated the "correct answer" — Metaphysician Undercover
That's how we determine the truth of a proposition, through judgement. How could the truth of a proposition be determined, except by a judgement? — Metaphysician Undercover
Actually, what you've just stated, that one must be right and the other wrong, is just a judgement itself, made by you, as Mww has already pointed out. — Metaphysician Undercover
A proposition requires an interpretation and a comparison with what is the case, to be determined as either true or not true. — Metaphysician Undercover
Your use of "true" here is deceptive, because you do not disclose the person who is making the judgement that p is true. — Metaphysician Undercover
Is it true that even the president can't declassified documents that contain information about our nuclear arsenal? — TiredThinker
I have three queued up that aren't buying it. — Srap Tasmaner
So, what does the paper say about factive verbs? — Metaphysician Undercover
One of my aims here has been to convince you to abandon the idea that the 'factive verbs' form a sui generis semantic or syntactic category. Perhaps there is some sui generis semantic or syntactic category of expressions that deserves the name 'factive verbs' or 'factive expressions', but the list that philosophers usually offer does not comprise such a category. I have made a case for denying that an utterance of "S knows p' is true only if p is true, i.e. that "knows" is factive.
Hazlett takes this to motivate divorcing semantic considerations about the verb “to know” from knowledge, the state of traditional epistemic interest. Even though “knows” is, according to Hazlett, not a factive verb, even Hazlett accepts that knowledge itself is a state that can only obtain if its content is true.
Yes, that is how "knowledge", as the subject of epistemology, is normally defined. But we were not talking about "knowledge", the epistemological subject, we were talking about normal use of "know" as an attitude. And the fact is that people often claim to know things, which turn out to be not the case. So the definitions which epistemologists prescribe as to what "knowledge" ought to mean, do not accurately reflect how "know" is truly used. — Metaphysician Undercover
“I think we should have a law at the federal level that would say that after 15 weeks, no abortion on demand,” the South Carolina senator said at a news conference to discuss the bill, which would indeed ban abortion nationwide after 15 weeks gestation, a far cry from the “late-term abortion” ban Graham is publicly marketing.
Graham wants to overrule the right of states to set their own abortion laws despite having said on several occasions that abortion should be dictated by states, not the federal government. “I think states should decide the issue of marriage and states should decide the issue of abortion,” the South Carolina senator told CNN last month.
Graham also tweeted in May that if “the Supreme Court overturns Roe v. Wade, which I believe was one of the largest power grabs in the history of the Court, it means that every state will decide if abortion is legal and on what terms.”
