No, the numerals on a number line do not represent the number of numerals, because there is zero, and negatives. — Metaphysician Undercover
That your example was meant to convey something about someone without language using correspondence, so I thought it important to say that language is part of your example.
But I missed the last sentence. OK, this is a contrast case, not an example. My bad. I was reading it as the example.
Sure, I agree that with a language less creature that they do not speak about truth or falsity or anything like that. Say a wild bird -- they communicate, but it's not with language. Or, perhaps we could say, it's a proto-language, prior to having the ability to represent its own sentences. — Moliere
Counting without understanding quantity would just be a meaningless regurgitation of words. — Janus
Would we expect the child to intuitively "get" the idea of quantity or number from an exercise like that? — Janus
From one time? No. (It takes kids more than a couple weeks to make it from kindergarten to 6th grade.) — Srap Tasmaner
Somehow truth is the speech that is properly of here and properly of us. — Srap Tasmaner
Hypotheticals are also truth apt. "If the volcano blows, a cooling trend will begin.". This isn't specifically about us, and it isn't here. — Tate
Why doesn't everyone just sum up their views of truth in roughly two to three paragraphs. No responses to the summation, just your particular point of view. At least no responses until the summaries are complete. — Sam26
I was thinking about how truth has to be about our world, about where we live, and is thereby also about us, every time, whether it seems to be or not, because every truth says something about what kind of world we live in and that says something about us as its residents, as part of it. — Srap Tasmaner
And now we're back on topic. — Srap Tasmaner
What about counterfactuals? Are they false (or not truth-apt)? — Michael
It's a wide open invitation. — Sam26
but that kind of experience clarifies the distinction between your ignorance, before you saw the truth, however much evidence you may have had for your beliefs, and your knowledge, once you have. — Srap Tasmaner
I'm not saying truth is always like that, of course, but that kind of experience clarifies the distinction between your ignorance, before you saw the truth, however much evidence you may have had for your beliefs, and your knowledge, once you have. — Srap Tasmaner
In addition to my reply to Tate above, counterfactuals also imply, right up front, something that is the case, and try to show how that matters, in this world, by imagining that it's not. — Srap Tasmaner
At least we've drawn the scope of our analysis to our experience, as opposed to trying to tie it to something metaphysical. — Tate
If that's what we've done, then I was way off. Wouldn't be the first time. — Srap Tasmaner
The sort of thing you can come to know is the sort of thing that makes our sentences true. — Srap Tasmaner
I just meant we don't have to get our boxers in a bunch over the status of truthbearers, the content of truthmakers, and the mysterious correspondence relation that's supposed to hold between them. — Tate
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