We sure do, and not a slight difference either. "...completely arbitrary,...assumed, ...existing only in the minds which assume them." As I read you, this is your bottom line. The ultimate reality of truth is just no reality at all. — tim wood
How do you square this with any notion of reality? Let's look a little deeper: a rock hits you. You're angry (say), at what, at whom, for what? It's all just completely arbitrary assumptions on your part that exist only in your mind.It must needs be that you are angry at, and can be angry only at, yourself (never mind the problems with that notion). Nor are you rescued by the possibility of the existence of indeterminacies; after all, such indeterminacies can only be conjectural. — tim wood
I say, on the other hand, that true-ness is a real property, of propositions. — tim wood
So we come to an elemental recognition: true-ness is a function of meaning. Probably we knew this all along, but just failed to make it explicit. Where I think you have gone astray is by descending into sub-minimal considerations. I'm thinking that a sign of that confusion is when the real becomes unreal, it's "turtles all the way down," or when the ordinary becomes impossible. Does this put us on one page? — tim wood
You run close along the line of saying everything is in the mind. But I don't think that's you. Is it? I half agree with, and in that half, completely. That is, I think truth is a creature of mind. And I agree that nothing out there in physical reality is either true or truth. But I think you're putting both halves in mind and nothing out there. And maybe you're right, but that's radical, don't you think? And if you agree, don't you think that kind of radical understanding of truth needs rigorous demonstration?But the reality of "truth" as "no reality at all" is not my bottom line. The bottom line is that the reality of truth, is that truth is entirely within the mind. — MU
Meaning is out of court, here, except in the practical sense. If you're going to argue that we cannot really know anything, then I invite you back to the horse and the gold: at some point we know as a practical matter, and correctly, that the horse is a horse and the gold is gold.No, see this is the root of our difference in opinion. True-ness cannot be a function of meaning, because it is an essential property of meaning that it can be interpreted in various ways. That is why I keep stressing the importance of indeterminateness. Meaning itself is indeterminate, requiring an interpretation as a mode of determination, in order that we can have any sort of truth. So true-ness is really a function of the interpretation. It cannot be a function of meaning itself, because meaning like information, and everything else with physical existence, (i.e. the entire physical world), must be interpreted before truth can be attributed to the interpretation. — MU
You run close along the line of saying everything is in the mind. But I don't think that's you. Is it? I half agree with, and in that half, completely. That is, I think truth is a creature of mind. And I agree that nothing out there in physical reality is either true or truth. But I think you're putting both halves in mind and nothing out there. And maybe you're right, but that's radical, don't you think? And if you agree, don't you think that kind of radical understanding of truth needs rigorous demonstration? — tim wood
I'm looking for the something out there that grounds truth, makes it a) possible, b) sensible, and maybe c) singular. Let's take a brick of the yellow metal, gold. Clearly everything that is understood about gold is in the mind. But are you willing to exchange what I call real dollars for my mental gold? Of course not. There has to be something out there in reality that corresponds to the gold, that just is gold as understood. That you might be interested in exchanging for, at a good price. — tim wood
Any discussion about how we know it's gold, or how we know anything, is here simply the wrong discussion. — tim wood
Generalizing, I think that for each true statement, there is something out there that corresponds to it, and grounds it. "There is a horse," is true if there just is a horse there, and not otherwise. And let's not be distracted by or get lost in notions of real v. fake horses, or how we know it's a horse, or are just mistaken, and so forth. We presuppose we can determine if a horse is there - the question being is it there, or not. — tim wood
With true statements about ideas, that themselves have no physical counterpart, I'll simply retreat to the notion of demonstration, which can always be rendered in a physical form. That is, the thing not strictly in the mind can be "out there" in the sense of the demonstration of ideas, and must be in the sense of the horse. So far, all this seems simple, intuitive, practical. — tim wood
Meaning is out of court, here, except in the practical sense. If you're going to argue that we cannot really know anything, then I invite you back to the horse and the gold: at some point we know as a practical matter, and correctly, that the horse is a horse and the gold is gold. — tim wood
True-ness is the quality - truth - of a single true proposition. Qua itself, it cannot be interpreted in various ways (except in error). The proposition itself may give rise to different truths, but each in itself is univocal with respect to that truth. — tim wood
Now, it may be we're saying the same thing. Let's check. In this context I presuppose that indeterminateness is in the mind, and that it can be resolved into one or more determinatenesses, given appropriate effort. And there is no truth until that task is completed for at least the indeterminateness in question. — tim wood
If it cannot be resolved, then no truth can come from it (other than, perhaps, that it's unresolvable). — tim wood
I have a new version of truth (grown from this discussion): truth is the capacity for a proposition to be grounded, in a practical sense, outside the mind, whether in exemplification or demonstration. Which seems just another way of saying that truth is the collection of singular true-nesses. — tim wood
True-ness is the quality - truth - of a single true proposition. Qua itself, it cannot be interpreted in various ways (except in error). The proposition itself may give rise to different truths, but each in itself is univocal with respect to that truth.
— tim wood
If it is true, as you say, that a proposition cannot be interpreted in various ways except in error, then whose interpretation is the correct one? — MU
My interest is in what truth is.
...
As to definitions, I fail to see what they have to do with truth. — tim wood
What I'm looking for is an understanding of the generalization of this singular case, so I can use it (the understanding) to inform and answer the question, what is truth (if it's anything). The purpose of this example is to kick free of distracting notions of verifiability, indeterminateness, definition, justification, etc., which all seem to presuppose truth, and focus on just truth itself (again, if that's possible).. — tim wood
Not quite. It's probable that every ordinary language proposition has multiple interpretations. Given an interpretation, there is a truth function associated with that interpretation. It is the value of that truth function for that interpretation that I hold is not variable. This implies, and I accept, that different interpretations could have different and inconsistent truth values. — tim wood
I think truth must have "contact" with something real, that bridges subject and predicate, and makes the proposition true. I think you're stuck in a relative subjectivism. Your position may facilitate critiques of how truth works, or how knowledge may work, or what certain limits of knowledge are. But for the question of what truth is, your position seems to destroy it. — tim wood
perhaps ultimately — A Seagull
You may reject my definition, if you do not like it. But your rejection of my definition does not make the definition false, it only means that I have failed to justify it. So a definition is a type of thing which can never be false. It can fail in attempts to be justified, but this does not make it false. Nor is a definition ever really true, it is just accept as that which defines the term.But since a definition can never be false, this is the type of thing which truth is. — MU
Do you agree that truth is what makes a statement true? And do you agree that what constitutes truth is the impossibility of falsity? Whatever it is which is impossible to be false, this type of thing is what truth is. Will you recognize that "definition" fulfills this condition, of that which is impossible to be false? — MU
Suppose in your example, the man offers the proposition "a cow is in the barn". The truth of this statement is determined by the definitions of the terms. — MU
The general etymology seems to be related to "faith, faithfulness, fidelity, loyalty; veracity, quality of being true; pledge, covenant," from Germanic abstract noun *treuwitho, from Proto-Germanic treuwaz "having or characterized by good faith". A solid oak would be something like a metaphor for someone who is trustworthy.
Not that etymology is some magic key, just that it shows something like the genealogy of a concept, and in this case it's related to trustworthiness Truth is that which you can rely on. — gurugeorge
Certainly not! Do I agree that being an onion is what makes an onion an onion? Yes. Because the onion always already was an onion. The word for this that comes to my mind is "primordial." The onion-ness of the onion is primordially part of the onion. — tim wood
Nonsense, sez I. The truth of "A cow is in the barn," is a function of whether or not a cow is in the barn. To shave this a little closer: We could understand the question this way: "Is there something in the barn and if there is, is it a cow (or something else)?" — tim wood
I suppose I'm a phenomenalist. By that I mean that whatever can be experienced is a phenomenon, of some kind, whether cabbage, onion, justice, unicorns, or dragons. I buy the Kantian notion that we have a hard time grounding phenomena anywhere but in perception. — tim wood
At the same time I find the world as I experience it seems to be consistent with phenomena as I encounter them. — tim wood
That is, there is an entire phenomenology prior to language. Yet it seems to me that you're stuck at language - if there were not a world prior to - primordial to - language, then how would language have anything to talk about? I am not too interested in where the word "onion" comes from, or if indeed we have any understanding or knowledge of onions before we encounter them. Once they're part of our phenomenal world, I simply take it as given, and uninteresting, that they existed before we knew they existed. — tim wood
Your truth, then, appears simply a verbal truth, a consequence of definitions and well-formed propositions. If that's all there is, then truth is a pretty dodgy concept - not even a concept but a rough idea not thought through. — tim wood
I'm coming around to seeing that truth is a quality of experience. It's not proved; its judged. (Once judged, it's fair game for your kind of critical analysis, if that's appropriate, and all kinds of things can be said, true or false, depending on the criteria.) — tim wood
That which makes statements of thought/belief true is correspondence with/to fact/reality. — creativesoul
Truth is in the mind - check. It is related to reason - um, hm, provisional check. How are you defining reason, here? Reasoning is dependent on language. For true propositions, sure. But maybe just here is your problem (lol). I think most folks acknowledge that animals reason, many manifestly so. But where does that put you? (I.e, animals have language, or animals don't reason.) — tim wood
But why not truth as primordial to language? Maybe "primordial" is too fancy a word, perhaps "underlying" is better. — tim wood
Consider: do you have experiences that cause in you a reaction of judgement and then of action (or reaction), all prior to any articulation? Certainly after the fact you can verbalize them, but maybe not entirely. — tim wood
Another example occurs to me: at dinner there's something disgusting on your dinner plate. Do you need/use either of language or reason to react to it? Again, after the fact, sure, but that's after. — tim wood
How you account for counterfactuals?
Well a couple of problems here. The correspondence theory of truth is really just a test to see which propositions (P) are true, or alternatively, a machine for cranking out true Ps. To call the quality all these Ps possess, that they're true, truth, is simply to use "truth" as a collective term that means only that the Ps in question are true. The question of this thread is if that's all there is to truth (i.e., the set of all Ps true under correspondence), or if there is something more.
Now things get obscure. (What follows is partly borrowed from an online article, but I forget where.) Let P be "John is married to Jane." Under correspondence, P is true if John is married to Jane. Could not be simpler: the relevant part of the world corresponds to P. But how about P1, John is married? In the world John is married to Jane. That means that P1 is true not as a matter of correspondence, but because P is true. P1, then, is a dialectical truth.
Two points: correspondence clearly does not exhaust the possibilities for there being true Ps. And all that's accomplished is a larger generalization of truth.
But for the moment, you take up the question: is there more to truth than just trueness of the P(s) in question? Before answering, read gurugeorge's last post above.
Clearly you have never owned a pet. Or if you did you paid no attention to it. My experience is just ordinary cats and dogs, but they figure things out, sometimes difficult things, sometimes quickly! As to logic, what logic? Aristotelian categorical logic, with syllogisms? Mathematical logic? Rhetorical logic? So many kinds. Maybe they use animal logic. And how do you think if you don't use some sort of logic?No. I don't think most people would say that other animals reason. Animals think, but to reason is to think with the use of logic, which animals do not do. — MU
I think you're on to something, here. In your sentence you attribute something; the word you use for what is attributed is truth. What, exactly, is that? What do you mean? How can truth be attributed if it's what you say above? I recognize this is just ordinary usage, but the whole point of this thread is to examine these ideas, to part the curtains of ordinary usage, to see if there's anything behind them.Truth is what we attribute to what people say, i.e., "that person speaks the truth". — MU
Really? All the books in the world contain zero truth? All the speeches, before they're spoken? And as well my thoughts, and everyone else's, barren of truth? You're stuck on truth as a speech phenomenon, and that sounds like a bespoke definition for sure - a perfectly god one, as far as it goes. But tell me how it's not begging the question in this discussion.Can you think of truth being attributed to anything other than what people say? If not, then why not just accept that truth is a property of speech? — MU
We're talking about correspondence, which I understand to mean correspondence to the world, and precisely not to language about the world, except as that language accurately "contains" the world. In particular, no one is just married, in the world. Being married is always being married to someone. This distinction returns accuracy to language that language too often scants. That John is married is a conclusion - that happens to be true - but not a fact about the world, and therefore not a truth under correspondence. The fact in the world is that John is married to Jane.I don't see the purported problem here, though. If P1 is true, then it is so by virtue of corresponding to fact/reality. P could be false, and yet P1 could still be true. — Creativesoul
Interesting. Things that are merely mixed can be subsequently separated, but these are more like baked together (irrevocably entwined), and thereby inseparably, as you say. It's you that baked them, can you develop the thought some more?Trust, truth, and meaning are irrevocably entwined and virtually inseparable.... — Creativesoul
By calling things that are contrary to fact "counterfactual" given an appropriate context for my doing so. — creativesoul
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