So one might say that the proposition that grass is green is made true by the fact that grass is green. But then what is the difference between the fact that grass is green and the green grass? Are they the same thing? If so, and if the latter is a thing, then facts are things. Are they different? If so, can we deduce the observer-independence of the fact from the observer-independence of the thing (assuming, for the sake of argument, that green grass is observer-independent)? To answer the latter we must first determine how the fact that grass is green differs from the green grass. — Michael
In a previous thread, I received a question posed by @Michael. It states the following:
"So one might say that the proposition that grass is green is made true by the fact that grass is green. But then what is the difference between the fact that grass is green and the green grass? Are they the same thing?" — Posty McPostface
“If so, and if the latter is a thing, then facts are things.”
“Are they different?”
“If so, can we deduce the observer-independence of the fact from the observer-independence of the thing (assuming, for the sake of argument, that green grass is observer-independent)? To answer the latter we must first determine how the fact that grass is green differs from the green grass.” — Michael
I decided to post this question as it stood as the topic title.
Is the difference between the fact of grass being green and green grass embedded in our use of language?
My take on the matter is deflationary. There is some implicit metaphysics being pushed by stating 'the fact the grass is green' from 'the grass is green'.
Surely we’d all agree that facts are things, but the green grass, and the fact that it’s green are two different things. — Michael Ossipoff
where the green grass is just a statement based on individual experience that is much like the beetle in Wittgenstein's box. — Posty McPostface
If you meant "thing" as a material thing or material object, then of course a fact isn't that kind of a thing. — Michael Ossipoff
For the relation between "statement" and "fact", wouldn't you say that a statement is an utterance that tells about a fact?
I don't know. Do true statements refer to facts or objects? Does the statement "the ball is falling" refer to the fact that the ball is falling or to the falling ball? — Michael
True statements regarding empirical conditions have to refer to objective states of affairs other people can verify, however we wish to metaphysically classify those things. The ball is falling is true when it corresponds to an empirical situation with a falling ball. — Marchesk
I'And what are states of affairs? Facts or objects? — Michael
I'm not sure what you're trying to say here. We have the statement "the grass is green" and we have the green grass. So where does the fact fit in here? Is it the statement "grass is green"? Is it the green grass? Or is it some third thing, neither the statement nor the object? — Michael
The fact is the state of affairs that the statement tells about.
It's neither the statement nor the object. — Michael Ossipoff
It's information about the states of affairs, which can be as simple as noting the color property of grass, or the direction the object is moving. — Marchesk
Then you're just changing the question to "what is the difference between a state of affairs and an object?" — Michael
Yes, but not just.
A thing is whatever isn't a modifier or an action (distinct from the word for a modifier or an action, and except when the modifier or action is spoken of as a thing).
I think "object" is often used to mean "thing". Don't they have the same meaning, in such usages as "abstract object"?
A fact is a state of affairs.
I guess that's true even if no statement is made, to tell about it.
Even a fact is a thing. — Michael Ossipoff
Information? So facts are cognitive things? I guess that the answer to the original question, then, is that facts are observer-dependent (even if the object/event/state-of-affairs isn't)? — Michael
None of this addresses the issue. We have the statement "the grass is green" and we have the green grass. But then we also have the fact as something else. — Michael
So what sort of thing is a fact, if not an utterance and if not a material object?
And if we put the original question in context, are facts observer-independent?
We can accept that material objects are observer-independent
, but given that facts aren't material objects, it doesn't then follow that fact are observer-independent.
Again, I have no idea what you're trying to say, or how it relates to the issue-at-hand. — Michael
Again, I have no idea what you're trying to say — Michael
, or how it relates to the issue-at-hand.
But surely facts are things, — Michael Ossipoff
But then what is the difference between the fact that grass is green and the green grass? Are they the same thing? If so, and if the latter is a thing, then facts are things. Are they different? If so, can we deduce the observer-independence of the fact from the observer-independence of the thing (assuming, for the sake of argument, that green grass is observer-independent)? — Michael
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