This is the same conclusion as Gettier's, but obtained in a different way. — alcontali
If "true" means that a proposition appears in the real, physical world, then not one theorem in mathematics is "true" — alcontali
I don't see the similarity. — creativesoul
The correspondence theory of truth requires some kind of legitimate isomorphism between the true proposition and the history of the universe. — alcontali
SImply put "Justified belief" is enough As stated so clearly by Gettier. — alcontali
Thought/belief is long before statements.
— creativesoul
Agreed... — alcontali
I disagree. We cannot know a falsehood. — creativesoul
Statements that have no correspondence with the real, physical world are not (necessarily) false. They are simply not "true" as meant in the correspondence theory of truth. — alcontali
For example, if we construct an abstract, Platonic world in which there are two symbols, S and K, and two rules [1] Kxy = x [2] Sxyz = xz(yz), then we can trivially demonstrate by applying both rules that (SKx)y = y. Therefore, SKx is the identity operator in this abstract world. — alcontali
I'm granting all this. It's true by definition. Different animal altogether. — creativesoul
The correspondence theory's truth is absolutely never provable, simply, because we have no access to the (axiomatic) construction logic of the real, physical world, i.e. the notorious theory of everything. — alcontali
Correspondence is easily provable. That's what verification/falsification methods look for. — creativesoul
Provable, according to proof theory, means that the proposition necessarily follows from the construction logic of the world (in which you prove it).
You cannot possibly achieve that with the real, physical world.
It just cannot be done. — alcontali
Provable knowledge is never (correspondence theory's) true. — alcontali
I can know that I'm typing on a computer. — creativesoul
There's a certain amount of irony here. I mean do you live somewhere else, aside from the real physical world? — creativesoul
If "true" means that a proposition appears in the real, physical world, — alcontali
Gettier concludes that JTB (Justified True Belief) must be JB (Justified Belief). — alcontali
I reject propositions in lieu of thought/belief statements. Belief cannot be reduced to propositions. Statements can. Thought/belief is long before statements. — creativesoul
That's not what he's saying. The typical approach to the Gettier problems, by the way, is not that JTB is wrong, but that it needs to be better qualified. — Terrapin Station
Well, with the entire field of mathematics not being correspondence-theory "true", the "T" in JTB is simply too much of a problem. If math is knowledge, then JTB is wrong. It must be JB instead. — alcontali
Well, with the entire field of mathematics not being correspondence-theory "true", the "T" in JTB is simply too much of a problem. If math is knowledge, then JTB is wrong. It must be JB instead. — alcontali
...to add the adjective 'true' implies that it is both justified and true,w hen in fact all we have access to is the justification. We have no extra process where we can then go and determine whether it is true. OK, we can checked off justified or best justified, now let's see if we can check off true... — Coben
Truth is for the Pope. — Coben
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