I said nothing about Pragmatism.
Someone looking for proof?
Interesting that Sand should admit that.
I was.
Do you recognize that two different people can have two different notions of what counts as a "post-truth" world?
It's always easiest to criticize another's position when one begins with misunderstanding, and then refuses to admit that much.
There are obviously two different senses of the term "post-truth" at work here. Yours and mine. I'm neither denying nor affirming the coherency of your usage. Nor need I.
Sand - on the other hand - is not granting an others' terms.
One cannot validly object to another's claims by virtue of using a different sense of a key term.
That is exactly what Sand has been doing. Anyone can check the record for themselves.
So... pragmatism came along and fooled enough people into thinking of truth as man-made, subjective, and what-not that the sheer size of the population began to make it a habit of conflating truth with thought/belief.
Along with pragmatism comes the mistaken conclusion that truth is man-made. It's much easier to go along with that when the Church and the usage of the term "truth" were virtually inseparable.
Donald Trump shared a news story on Tuesday that cites anonymous sources and leaked intelligence less than 24 hours after criticizing the practice.
Trump....criticized the New York Times for its “non-existent sources” and berated the “Fake News Media” on Monday night.
Then, early Tuesday morning, he shared three Fox and Friends news segments, including one about North Korea that cited “US officials with knowledge of the latest intelligence” but did not identify who the officials are, and quoted an “official who requested anonymity”.
The Fox News story asserted that US spy satellites had detected North Korea moving anti-ship cruise missiles to a patrol boat.
As president, Trump would probably have access to information in the articles he shares that credit anonymous sources.
Criticizing the practice of anonymous sourcing, then sharing a story that cites anonymous sources soon after, has become something of a monthly pattern for the president.
In May, Trump encouraged people to question stories that include the phrase “sources say”, because “it is very possible that those sources don’t exist but are made up by fake news writers”.
Two days later, he shared a Fox and Friends story about his son-in-law and White House adviser, Jared Kushner, that was attributed to anonymous sources.
More evidence that Trump doesn't understand how to do his job or what he's talking about (as if more were needed.)
Martin Shkreli, the infamous pharmaceutical industry CEO responsible for hiking the cost of his company’s lifesaving drug from $13.50 to $750 overnight, once tweeted that “Every time a drug goes generic, I grieve.”
.More than 11,000 organizations spent $3.12 billion on[healthcare] lobbying the federal government in 2016
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.