for simple things like does the sky reflect the electro magnetic spectrum (a particular frequency) that usually appears to be blue to most people or that 1+1 = 2, those things in fact are objective truth. — christian2017
Are true propositions true for everyone? — Harry Hindu
Couldn't you procede inductively? Ask a large and hopefully representative sample of people and infer that what they say is likely what everyone would say. — PossibleAaran
The statement is not 'I don't believe in truth' but 'I don't believe in objective truth'. The qualifier is critical and removes any self-referential or regression problem.The Relativist would immediately run into the objection that when he says "I don't believe in truth", he means to state something which is true — PossibleAaran
Isnt that what we do? Scientists make claims and propose theories which then require their peers to perform experiments to then determine if the theory holds. Is it true that humans evolved from other organisms, or that the Earth is experiencing climate change?That would depend on how you define 'true'. If your definition of truth is 'that which everyone experiences' then a proposition which is true is true for everyone by definition. But that definition would require you to check with everyone before declaring anything to be true. — Isaac
Isnt that what we do? Scientists make claims and propose theories which then require their peers to perform experiments to then determine if the theory holds. — Harry Hindu
I think she punishes Jemimah for lying, and lying is deliberately saying something you don't believe.Mum sensibly punishes Jemimah for skipping school, not for having a belief about it.
Does that not show that "truth" in ordinary English invovles something the Relativist cannot accept? — PossibleAaran
No, it is you that is missing something crucial - namely the rest of the post that you only responded to part of, so it is no wonder that your complaints don't take into account the rest of the post.But that is scientific peers. You're missing something crucial... — Isaac
Sure, because I don't avoid answering questions like you do. There were several in my previous post that you ignored. Never mind that your example is about the majority of human's understanding of the world PRIOR to the scientific method being used.A second, unrelated question. How does your theory handle the seemingly counter intuitive problem of knowledge evolution? If that which the majority of (specialist?) recorders say they experience is what "truth" is, then was it 'true' that the earth was flat back when that would have been the report of most observers? — Isaac
People, like you and me, test scientific theories every time we use the technology they are based on. Does combustion work the same for everyone? — Harry Hindu
your example is about the majority of human's understanding of the world PRIOR to the scientific method being used. — Harry Hindu
I also defined "truth" in a way that is similar to the correspondence theory of truth - as a relationship between some claim or proposition and the way things really are. — Harry Hindu
I have defined knowledge as a set of rules for interpreting sensory data. Knowledge changes. What we thought we knew we find out that we didn't, so did we really know anything? — Harry Hindu
that world exists objectively, independently of the ways we think about it or describe it, and our thoughts and claims are about that world. — Harry Hindu
I have also defined "truth" as the degree of accuracy between some state of affairs and some claim. — Harry Hindu
I think she punishes Jemimah for lying, and lying is deliberately saying something you don't believe.
In everyday language, someone is telling the truth if they are saying what they believe. When talking about the truth in general, the idea seems to be that the truth is what most people would believe if they had witnessed whatever it was,
None of this has any bearing on 'absolute truth' or 'objective truth', which could be absolutely anything in the presence of Last Thursdayism or Descartes' demon. — andrewk
How do you make that out? How does one get a regress out of a person saying "I don't believe in objective truth". In what's above, the regress relied on the statement being the very different "I don't believe in truth".even if the Relativist can appeal to the ordinary notion of truth, it doesn't change the fact that his position generates an infinite regress when you try to understand it. — PossibleAaran
A statement is either true or false. If it is true that 'there is no objective truth' then that seems like a contradiction.
If it is false that 'there is no objective truth' then that means objective truth exists, so the claim is not contradictory. So the only time that statement makes logical sense is when it is false, which is rather trivial. So what am I missing? — curiousnewbie
Are we not testing the scientific method itself when using technology that some theory arrived at using the scientific method? I don't see how my explanation doesn't allow for mass delusions.We're not using the scientific method to determine that a scientific theory works by using its products. We're using the same everyday pragmatism used by those who thought the earth was flat. — Isaac
That is the problem with knowledge that I explained.How could we ever know whether what we believe is "the way things really are", and if your answer to that question is some method (let's call it method A), then your definition of 'truth' is really "that which passes the test of method A" since everything passing that test is presumed to be "the way things really are" and therefore 'true'. — Isaac
Do you have a short-term memory problem? That would explain a lot.Why are you talking about knowledge all of a sudden. We were talking about 'truth' not knowledge. I'm not following the link. — Isaac
And then in the same post that you ask why I'm talking about knowledge, you ask me how we know anything:A second, unrelated question. How does your theory handle the seemingly counter intuitive problem of knowledge evolution? — Isaac
So, it would seem to me that the word, "know" and "knowledge" need to be defined. And yes, we have been talking about "knowledge". Try your best to remember. We have evidence that you used the word even though you don't seem to remember. This is what I mean by objective. Because your words exist out in the world it is possible, for those that look, to find them.How could we ever know whether what we believe is "the way things really are", — Isaac
Did you make a reply post to me independent of me ever reading it? If I never read your reply, did you really write it? Is your post in my head, or on the screen? If it were only in my head or yours, how can others read it? If you were to see something behind me and tell me that there is something behind me, should I look behind me, or in your head (or more specifically your mind?)?I don't understand how this can be. How can our thoughts and claims (verbal expressions of thought) be about something which is independent from our thoughts. How would we go about constructing a thought about something which is independent of the way we think about it? — Isaac
"There-is-no-objective-truth" is self-inconsistent if understood to be a universal proposition. — sime
How do we objectively map the meaning of words? How is it that we can even communicate if all of our words don't exist out in the world and we use definitions (an objective meaning of a word) to determine their meaning, and therefore the meaning of your post? Does your post have an objective meaning - one that everyone should realize if they read your post? What is the meaning of your post - what others interpret, or what you intended when you wrote them? We have a set of rules for interpreting words that we all agree on, just as scientists have a set of rules to determine the accuracy of some hypothesis.And what would be objective about that? How do we objectively map a relation between a claim and a state of affairs? — Terrapin Station
Objectivist: So when you say "I don't believe in objective truth", you really mean to say "I believe that I don't believe in objective truth".
Relativist: Right. — PossibleAaran
How do we objectively map the meaning of words? — Harry Hindu
That is the problem with knowledge that I explained.
Why are you talking about knowledge all of a sudden. We were talking about 'truth' not knowledge. I'm not following the link. — Isaac
Do you have a short-term memory problem? That would explain a lot.
I was responding to this:
A second, unrelated question. How does your theory handle the seemingly counter intuitive problem of knowledge evolution? — Isaac
And then in the same post that you ask why I'm talking about knowledge, you ask me how we know anything:
How could we ever know whether what we believe is "the way things really are", — Isaac
So, it would seem to me that the word, "know" and "knowledge" need to be defined. And yes, we have been talking about "knowledge". Try your best to remember. We have evidence that you used the word even though you don't seem to remember. — Harry Hindu
Well for something to be objectively true it would have to be true for universally, wouldn't it? — curiousnewbie
Is that objectively true? — curiousnewbie
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