The problem is that there is no clear and unambiguous definition of "the truth", like there is of "the circle", or 'the square". This leaves us with doubt as to whether there really is a concept, which can be considered as an object, called "the truth".
in no way do those statements have the property of truth. — A Seagull
How do you judge that? You must know what 'the property of truth' is, to know that these statements don't have it. And if you don't know it, then you're simply expressing an opinion, but you can give no reason why anyone ought to agree that it's true — Wayfarer
Nice joke. Or do you actually know what the words bolded just above mean? I admit I have trouble with them. Do us all a service and in a well-crafted sentence or two or three, tell us what you understand "true" and "believe" to mean. — tim wood
If there is no agreed upon definition of what it means to be true, how can there be a concept of "the truth"? — Metaphysician Undercover
If there is no agreed upon definition of what it means to be true, how can there be a concept of "the truth"?
Or if you like, address the question of the OP, as Wayfarer has. Do you agree with him? That truth is turtles all the way down, except there aren't any turtles? — tim wood
just look at statements... how is it possible for them to have a 'property of truth'? — A Seagull
If that is true of your statement, then why I am expected to believe it? How can you make an argument? You're just creating strings of characters, right? Why bother typing anything? — Wayfarer
I am suggesting a cohesive and consistent approach to truth that does not have the inconsistencies of other theories. — A Seagull
I am suggesting a cohesive and consistent approach to truth that does not have the inconsistencies of other theories. — A Seagull
This is a statement, right.? You claim that it's 'cohesive and consistent' in the service of making a point - which is trying to persuade others that your theory is true, where other theories aren't. So if you succeed, you undermine your initial claim that statements can't be labelled 'true', because your statement then has the property of being a true theory, which is what you're arguing against. And if it doesn't fit have the property of being true, then it's not a true theory, and you haven't made your case — Wayfarer
Certainly you could label it as such if you wanted to; but do you have any criteria for doing so? — A Seagull
And everyone understands that the standard of truth for a given proposition needn't be the same standard for another. Truth, if it means anything, would just seem to refer to these different "trues." That is, truth is a many posing as and often being taken as a one. In this case, however, being a many is all it is.As a one, it's a nothing. — tim wood
I read John as taking the opposite view, that truth is so far from being arbitrary that it is fundamental, primordial. I think he means the truth of particular propositions, that each is, or is not, true. It raises an interesting question: what come first? The true itself? Or the possibility of being true? I suppose that the true/false divide comes into being somewhere when experience and understanding merged, and that the general term "truth" had to wait a long time before it came into usage. The passage from the descriptor, "true" to the noun-substantive (without a substance) "truth." — tim wood
Well here's the problem then. If each proposition requires a different standard to be judged as true, then "true" has a different meaning in each of these instances of use. From this, to say that a proposition is true, is really meaningless unless we indicate by which standard it is true. Clearly, there is no one concept of "truth" unless there is one standard by which we judge something as "true", just like there is one standard to judge something as "square", despite the many different sized squares.
John seems to think that there is a concept of truth which is prior to the concept of truth, and that's ridiculous. — Metaphysician Undercover
There cannot, because truth is more primordial than any concept. In fact concepts would be meaningless without always already taking for granted the possibility of their possession or lack of aptitude; which is to say the possibility of their truth or falsity. — John
Certainly you could label it as such if you wanted to; but do you have any criteria for doing so? — A Seagull
Of course! If only the label is 'true', but the statement itself doesn't have 'the property of truth', then the label is not true, because the statement it refers to is not true. It follows from your initial statement, that if no statements have the property of 'being true', then there's nothing meaningful you can say, because whatever you say must either be true, in which case it contradicts your argument, or it's false, in which case it's false. — Wayfarer
But how is it possible for a statement to have the 'property of truth'? — A Seagull
No, what's ridiculous is the amount of effort you put into reading posts before responding. I explicitly stated that I think there cannot be a concept of truth, and that truth is prior to all concepts: — John
What do you think a concept of anything consists in? Doesn't a concept of something consist in relating it to other particulars in terms of commonalities and differences in order to establish what kind of thing it is? Is not the possibility of the truth or falsity of these purported relations that form our concepts always prior to the purported relations themselves? — John
So what would this so-called "truth" consist of, which is independent from all concepts? Is it a physical thing? If not, then how does it differ from a concept? — Metaphysician Undercover
How could the truth or falsity of a relationship be prior to the relationship itself. — Metaphysician Undercover
So, you have decided that there are only physical things and the concepts of them? On what do you base this conclusion? — John
It is obvious that truth is not a physical thing. If you want to say that truth is a concept, and nothing more than that, then you should be able to give an account of it as such. — John
It's not prior to the relationship, but to our conception of the relationship; we conceive of relationships under the aegis of the possibility of the truth or falsity of our conception of them. — John
Concepts are not necessarily "of" physical things. — Metaphysician Undercover
Perhaps we can identify a particular type of attitude, rather than a multitude of different attitudes, and this particular attitude might lend itself as the essence of truth.
Would you agree that there is a relationship between truth and honesty? ...if the statement is made in honesty, it will always reflect the true thoughts of the author.
Now, what all true statements have in common, is that they were produced from that attitude of honesty. So if we are looking to define "truth", by determining what all true statements have in common, then we should consider this honest attitude as the defining feature.
Can you give me an example of a concept which is not given, even remotely, in terms of physical things or relations between physical things? — John
It would seem that truth is never "out there" inhering in the propositions; instead it seems to just be the expression of the synthesis of perception, knowledge, and judgment. Every truth is mine, in so far as I recognize it as a truth. But every truth is also prospectively a part of collective mind. — tim wood
Numbers and geometrical forms, laws of grammars, and logical relationships, can all be instantiated in physical forms, but they're essentially intellectual in nature. — Wayfarer
What exactly do you mean by saying they are "essentially intellectual in nature"? Could they be known apart from their physical instantiations? — John
Can you give me an example of a concept which is not given, even remotely, in terms of physical things or relations between physical things? — John
As I said before, the logical meaning of truth is that it is accordance with actuality. — John
The difficulty I'm having here is trying to figure out if truth lies in the intention, or in the speech. Answer, it seems neither. The speaker desires to speak truly, but whether he did or did not is not his judgment to make (except as he hears himself, but he doesn't get a vote). Nor is his (rhetorical) proposition true until it is judged so. In rhetoric/persuasive speech, the desire is part of what is judged, whereas in categorical propositions, the proposition is judged on content alone. — tim wood
So, a candidate MS is All S is P. We judge that it's true (in any of a number of ways, depending on the exact content of the MS). To be sure, our competence of judgment is likely borrowed, and the judgment itself may be ancient - but in at least some sense it's still our judgment.
For truth to exist at all, it seems we must be able to find it just here in our candidate MS.. — tim wood
It would seem that truth is never "out there" inhering in the propositions; instead it seems to just be the expression of the synthesis of perception, knowledge, and judgment. Every truth is mine, in so far as I recognize it as a truth. But every truth is also prospectively a part of collective mind.
Truth, then, is the recognized accordance of a proposition with the competent judgment of mind, and as such, testimony to the activity of that mind.
. — tim wood
Can truth be one of those things, created by honest, competent minds working together, yet somehow existing independently of those minds? Where would we find it? We've already determined that it is not within statements or propositions. If it is within the honest mind, then how is it also independent of the honest mind? — Metaphysician Undercover
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