I'm not at all sure how to approach this. Is it saying that ( "there is gold in those hills" is true) is extensionally equivalent to (there is gold in those hills)? And if not, than what?3. "there is gold in those hills" is true is semantically equivalent to there is gold in those hills — Michael
So you are objecting to existential generalisation over a truth statement? — Banno
That there is gold in hills in the absence of minds follows from your worldview. — frank
The status of propositions doesn't really have anything to do with this. — frank
I'm just talking about the adjective "true" (and the adjective "false"). I am saying that a) being true (or false) is a property of propositions, — Michael
b) the existence of propositions depends on the existence of language, — Michael
I'm not the one claiming that the existence of gold depends on the existence of something which has the property of being true. — Michael
The existence of gold and the truth of the proposition "gold exists" are two different things. — Michael
You're denying that propositions and states of affairs are the same thing. — frank
the existence of propositions depends on the existence of language — Michael
I dunno, when I look up the definition of "proposition" on wikipedia, and it says that they are "the type of object that declarative sentences denote", then it is not clear to me that "the type of object that declarative sentences denote" should depend on the existence of language. Is that a faulty analysis? — Apustimelogist
There is gold and there is the sentence "gold exists". Why add some third thing? Having a sentence, a proposition, and gold seems superflous. — Michael
There's certainly no need to bring up mind-independent abstract objects that exist even if language doesn't. — Michael
So we can add all things on top of just gold and sentences. — frank
The proposition that there are rocks, which we denote <there are rocks>, does not entail the existence of any beings that have or are capable of having mental states. It entails this neither in a strictly or broadly logical sense. That is, it is possible in the broadest sense for <there are rocks> to be true in the absence of all mental states. But now, if this proposition is possibly true in the absence of mental states, then it possibly exists in the absence of all mental states, and so is mind-independent. This is an easy argument for the mind-independence of at least some propositions.
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But if the Easy Arguments succeed, it seems that to accept propositions, we must accept Platonism. Conceptualism about propositions seems ruled out.
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Many philosophers deny that there are propositions precisely because they accept the validity of these Easy Arguments (and the truth of certain attitude ascriptions).
There are people who claim that mind-independent truth-apt propositions exist. — Michael
P1. "there is gold in those hills" is true if and only if there is gold in those hills
C1. Therefore, there is gold in those hills if and only if "there is gold in those hills" is true
P2. If "there is gold in those hills" is true then "there is gold in those hills" exists.
C2. Therefore, if there is gold in those hills then "there is gold in those hills" exists.
C3. Therefore, if "there is gold in those hills" does not exist then there is no gold in those hills. — Michael
For the proximate argument, supposing that the only minds that exist are human, and all (human) minds cease to exist, it does not follow that the existence of other objects is necessarily altered. But the question of whether they truly exist at least becomes moot. — Leontiskos
It is literally saying that the easy argument entails Platonism about propositions and that many philosophers reject propositions because of that. If it were just discussing whether or not rocks exist without us then it would only be the few idealists who take issue with it. — Michael
of being true (or false). — Michael
I keep it simple — Michael
There's certainly no need to bring up mind-independent abstract objects that exist even if language doesn't. — Michael
I keep it simple — Michael
There's certainly no need to bring up mind-independent abstract objects that exist even if language doesn't. — Michael
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