What do you mean by "radical charity", in the context of Truth and Knowledge?From the essay as a whole, I get an impression of what I might call "radical charity." Are Davidson's philosophical forays in general stabilized by a kind of radical charity? — ZzzoneiroCosm
I'm not familiar with Donald Davidson, but a quick Google search found this link to a PDF :If anyone has access to a pdf link, that would be extremely helpful. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Later on he says: "...belief is in its nature veridical."
The word "veridical" strikes me as suspicious here. — ZzzoneiroCosm
If it had not already been published, I would now change the title of `A Coherence Theory of Truth and Knowledge', and I would not describe the project as showing how 'coherence yields correspondence'. — Davidson
I would also now reject the point generally made against correspondence theories that there is no way we could ever tell whether our sentences or beliefs correspond to reality. This criticism is at best misleading, since no one has ever explained in what such a correspondence could consist; and, worse, it is predicated on the false assumption that truth is transparently epistemic. — Davidson
I also regret having called my view a 'coherence theory'. My emphasis on coherence was properly just a way of making a negative point, that 'all that counts as evidence or justification for a belief must come from the same totality of belief to which it belongs'. — Davidson
My emphasis on coherence was misplaced; calling my view a `theory' was a plain blunder. In his paper Rorty stressed a minimalist attitude towards truth that he correctly thought we shared. It could be put this way: truth is as clear and basic a concept as we have. Tarski has given us an idea of how to apply the general concept (or try to apply it) to particular languages on the assumption that we already understand it; but of course he didn't show how to define it in general (he proved, rather, that this couldn't be done). Any further attempt to explain, define, analyze, or explicate the concept will be empty or wrong... — Davidson
I'm not familiar with Donald Davidson, but a quick Google search found this link to a PDF :
https://epdf.pub/the-essential-davidson.html — Gnomon
Truth as basic, unanalyzable. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Are Davidson's philosophical forays in general stabilized by a kind of radical charity? — ZzzoneiroCosm
Later on he says: "...belief is in its nature veridical." — ZzzoneiroCosm
It is relevant to his argument that disagreement about specific facts can only occur against a background of shared true beliefs. — quickly
I like this, but skills is perhaps better than beliefs, in that 'beliefs' casts the whole thing as more explicit than I think it is. Have you looked into Dreyfus's Being-in-the-world? The 'form of life' is something like a set of norms that aren't explicit and can't plausibly be enumerated. — softwhere
In response to your question, I would argue that for Davidson beliefs are behavioral dispositions, as are skills....In your terminology, beliefs are skills. — quickly
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