As if triangles, parallel lines and chess were not real.
That doubt only happens against a background of certainty, and so cannot stand as a beginning position.
You can be absolutely certain that you are a cat, if you like. — Banno
Here are some of my beliefs on this matter :
1. All we ever have is beliefs.
2. We [ mostly ] use 'true' to say that we have or share a belief.
3. My belief is how the world is given to me ---reduced to its conceptual aspect, because I can't put the world in its sensual fullness in my talk.
4. The world is only given to individuals who experience it as meaningfully structured (who 'live' in those beliefs as simply the concept-aspect of world for them.)
5. All we can do is try to get better and better beliefs --- get a better 'view' on the one world we share -- often by discussing our beliefs with others to discover biases and inadequacy in those we currently have.
Note that truth doesn't matter. No one sees around their own perspective to some naked reality, because that reality would not be meaningfully/linguistically structured.
Belief is the intelligible structure [conceptual skeleton ] of the world as given to or grasped by a person. — plaque flag
I shared some beliefs about belief. how I understand belief. I of course call them 'true,' for this (as I make explicit) is simply to trivially agree with myself. My beliefs are roughly the articulation of my perspective on the world, the way I see things which I understand to transcend me, to be things in our one shared world.Ha, is that so? Is it true? Or is it just your belief? — Banno
I've already answered that question: All we can do is try to get better and better beliefs --- get a better 'view' on the one world we share -- often by discussing our beliefs with others to discover biases and inadequacy in those we currently have. I expect that you read newspapers or their modern equivalent, the 'mere beliefs' of various philosophers.And if it is just a belief of yours, why should we pay it any attention? And if you believe it, don't you by that very fact believe that it is true? — Banno
We do differentiate between what folk believe and what is true. A pragmatic account such as you present loses this distinction. — Banno
I don't think so. You just hid truth in "better and better". You are just paraphrasing "A statement is better if it more closely approximates the truth".I've already answered that question: — plaque flag
So, even though I am not a cat I can still be certain that I am? Just not absolutely certain. — jgill
I don't think so. You just hid truth in "better and better". You are just paraphrasing "A statement is better if it more closely approximates the truth". — Banno
That's just you reading in your own biases, as far as I can tell. — plaque flag
Sure, Janus, if you like. The salient bit is that to believe that p is to believe that p is true.Belief presupposes a belief in truth, not the possession of it. — Janus
Yep. the presumption that truth is divalent. The alternative is anti-realism. Help yourself.If the truth cannot be determined, it is a mere human presumption that says there must nonetheless be a truth. — Janus
Your reply is that all we have is better and better beliefs. — Banno
You might suppose (and at times seem to propose) that you can get by this by working with what is most useful, regardless of it's truth. — Banno
https://iep.utm.edu/truthpro/The truth predicate is not used to say something about sentences or propositions. It is used to say something about the world. As Grover (1992, p. 221) puts it, prosentences function “at the level of the object language.” Even when someone makes an utterance such as “John’s last claim is true”—which uses a referring expression that explicitly mentions an antecedent utterance token—the prosentential theory still denies that it is the utterance that is being talked about. The person uttering this sentence “expresses an opinion about whatever (extralinguistic thing) it was that John expressed an opinion about” (Grover, 1992, p. 19). W. V. Quine (1970, pp. 10-11) makes a similar claim, stating that the truth predicate serves “to point through the sentence to reality; it serves as a reminder that though sentences are mentioned, reality is still the whole point.”
A corollary of this is that to say that you believe p is to say that you believe that p is the case; that p is true. Hence belief presupposes truth. — Banno
The limits of my language mean the limits of my world. Logic fills the world: the limits of the world are also its limits... In fact what solipsism means, is quite correct, only it cannot be said, but it shows itself. ...That the world is my world, shows itself in the fact that the limits of the language (the language which I understand) mean the limits of my world. — TLP
The consequence of rejecting truth is that anything goes, which of course means that the nature of the world is determined by those with power. — Banno
To call P true is basically [only] to communicate (and, secondarily, reason about) [ one's belief that ] P. — plaque flag
What do you think of Meno's paradox?:
"If you know what you're looking for, inquiry is unnecessary. If you don't know what you're looking for, inquiry is impossible. Therefore, inquiry is either unnecessary or impossible." — frank
Shouldn't we have a single, perpetual thread for this question? — Banno
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