And the anti-realist will say that this is how our everyday conversions work. The anti-realist's position is an accurate representation of truth and statements as we ordinarily use them and the world as we ordinarily understand it. — Michael
I'm just addressing your accusation that it leads to omniscience. — Michael
We split up the world into so-called objects, on such a view, and thus all statements that presuppose there being multiple objects are strictly false, just a manner of speaking. — Srap Tasmaner
"the ship that leaves is the ship that returns" isn't made true by objective features of the world but by our own perceptions/conceptions/attitudes/whatever. — Michael
It's not about whether or not we call the ship "Theseus". It's about whether or not "the ship that leaves is the ship that returns" is true, and what makes it true. — Michael
You have us
choose to grab an arbitrary bunch of that stuff and call it X
— Hanover
and then assign X to categories (which aren't things in the world) based on some criteria, and we
choose those criteria for whatever purposes we have
— Hanover
So truth is only --- not even "also" but "only" --- a matter of our choices. — Srap Tasmaner
Yep. Thanks for clarifying.Maybe my point was missed or not well stated — Hanover
How does the noumenal affect the phenomenal? — Hanover
I don't see how that follows. — Banno
The realist defines the ship as the specific matter that was there originally because he's offering a metaphysical definition within the context of that conversation. That is, the ship is exactly what it is. — Hanover
Well we've established you aren't fluent in English. What language do you want it in? — frank
You seem to want to deny that there is or are private experiences (but I'm not sure). — Sam26
There's actually a proxy for The One Thing to hand: the unceasing flow of sensory data. And sure enough, people who start there, who in some sense consider that the realest of reals, are inclined to say that what you take to be an individual object is a fiction, that sentences like "My coffee cup is on the nightstand" aren't literally about coffee cups and nightstands but about artifacts of the model we build based on the flow of sensory data, and thus not literally true. Maybe it makes a difference that something is theorized to be "out there" causing the flow of data, but maybe it doesn't. — Srap Tasmaner
Well we've established you aren't fluent in English. What language do you want it in?
— frank
Back to ad homs already. — Banno
My argument would be that providing an interpretation is giving a meaning to something - that's the common definition; but things already have a meaning, and hence an interpretation. — Banno
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