A lie occurs when someone knows what is true, and yet makes a statement that is contrary to that truth. If one denies the distinction between belief and truth, then a lie must be were someone believes one thing but says another. — Banno
Facts are not the sort of thing that can be true or false; truth and false are predications of statements, not facts. — Banno
Facts' are neither true nor false - statements or propositions are true or false. — Wayfarer
So, a 'false fact' is an oxymoron; 'a fact' is what is held to be the case. — Wayfarer
It's a linguistic innovation, though. An artificial flower might appear real but in fact it is not. — Wayfarer
That's really the point. We can talk about artificial flowers and toy guns and so we might be able to talk about false facts. And as mentioned in the American Heritage Dictionary (referenced earlier), we do talk about false facts. In each of these cases we have something that appears to be one thing (a flower, a gun, or a fact) but actually isn't. But it doesn't then follow that we can dismiss the terms as being contradictory. "Artificial flower" is an acceptable term, as is "toy gun". So why not "false fact"? — Michael
Is there such a thing in English? — Banno
It's a free country, you can say what you like. But if you talk crap it muddies the waters, and since there is enough muddy water already, that's a waste of time making more. In the end, people who cannot or will not abide by a clear distinction between what is said and what is the case are best disregarded. It drains all meaning from the language. — unenlightened
Just the facts please. Unfortunately, there are no such things. It is literally a figment of ones imagination. The desire to place weight into a belief. Such "facts" are most often used by political parties, such as unemployment was 4.8% under Obama. An excellent example of a false fact. — Rich
Sure there are. The words are just attributes given to different beliefs in order to elevate the beliefs to something more weighty than a belief. But at the end they are all the same. In school, they teach "facts". That is how facts are formed. In newspapers they report "facts". Government creates "facts" for schools to teach and newspapers to report.
Facts are in the mind of the beholder based upon what they believe to be facts. People form impressions of facts. You may believe a fact is a state of being. That is a belief. An impression in your mind. — Rich
Something is true if someone believes it to be true - subject to constant change. — Rich
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