I think a distinction needs to be made between these two claims:
1. "p" is true iff p
2. "'p' is true" means "p"
Now Davidson pointed out that if you have a true T-sentence such as
1. "S" is true iff p
then you have in p, in effect, the meaning of S. — Banno
It isn't clear what this means. What's a material equivalence? Why not just an equivalence? — Tate
The imagination is the sort of thing that changes -- and so it's not a basis for understanding logic, given that logic is more stable than the imagination.
I'd have said some things once unimaginable are imaginable to me now. For instance, I thought classical and quantum mechanics conflicted at one point. I couldn't imagine that these could both be true! It was impossible! — Moliere
Material equivalence is usually thought of as obtaining between two propositions, or not. If two propositions have the same truth values on every row of a truth tables. It's another way of saying "correspondence". — Janus
There is a sentence which expresses the proposition that snow is white and there is the fact that snow is white. — Janus
Sheet-as-sheet to me indicates naming and descriptive practices accompanying the seeing. This eliminates language less seeing of the sheet, which - of course - is a problem.
— creativesoul
Is it? — Moliere
Perhaps a better tact, though: if truth is more general than linguistic -- say it is a correspondence between some animal belief and facts or reality, construing belief broadly to indicate that it could be linguistic or not so as to make explicit that we're interested in this -- then we are the types of creatures that rely upon linguistic truth, and only by understanding this kind of truth would we even be able to make statements more general about this bigger-picture truth. — Moliere
Perhaps a better tact, though: if truth is more general than linguistic -- say it is a correspondence between some animal belief and facts or reality, construing belief broadly to indicate that it could be linguistic or not so as to make explicit that we're interested in this -- then we are the types of creatures that rely upon linguistic truth, and only by understanding this kind of truth would we even be able to make statements more general about this bigger-picture truth. — Moliere
in fact it is by using objects that children are taught to count. — Janus
My twenty-seven-month-old granddaughter knew that "there's nothing in there" was not true, despite her not having a linguistic notion of truth, because she knew what the utterance meant, and knew that there were things in there(the fridge). — creativesoul
The only one applicable to language less creatures' belief is correspondence. — creativesoul
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