We have a sentence "the cat is on the mat", we have the cat on the mat, and we say that the former is about or describes the latter. Is that mysterious? I don't really think so. So why would it be mysterious to say that the former corresponds to the latter? — Michael
It seems to me that the counterfactual says something about some other possible world. — Michael
What would it mean for the truth to not be about our world? — Michael
Sentences are not favored as truthbearers outside artificial systems. Propositions work better for that purpose, although they're abstract objects. There's no 'aboutness' to a proposition. It's the content of an uttered sentence, which can take many forms: usually speech or writing.
How would you say a proposition corresponds to a truthmaker? Where do we look to see this relation? — Tate
I think you're making things far too complicated. — Michael
We use speech and writing to talk about/describe the world. If there's nothing mysterious about this then there's nothing mysterious about correspondence. — Michael
And that's not truth apt. — Tate
you might need a certain amount of context or background knowledge, all manner of things before your statement is, as I was putting it, "fully saturated" and ready to be true or false. — Srap Tasmaner
What I mean is, if asked how much context we need to pull in before a statement is truth-apt, the answer is something like "enough for it to be truth-apt." The initial answer anyway. I guess I'm asking for reams a theory, because I have dim memories of work on this problem. Just wondering if you have any sense of how such a project is faring. — Srap Tasmaner
What I mean is, if asked how much context we need to pull in before a statement is truth-apt, the answer is something like "enough for it to be truth-apt." — Srap Tasmaner
I think sometimes we expect more from certain concepts than they give us, or we over analyze certain concepts in search of a some phantom that will answer our intellectual itch. Philosophers have a tendency to take concepts out of their natural habitat, and place them in an unnatural one. — Sam26
I didn't know anyone was researching that. — Tate
Enough for the proposition to be understood, I would think. It would be difficult to understand a proposition without any context. — Luke
That's a fair question. Some of this is a little odd. If the kettle here hasn't quite come to boil yet, but might have, there is a nearby world where it has. In our world, "The kettle is boiling" is a falsehood, but not so far away it is a truth. Because these come in pairs, you get to say that "The kettle is not boiling" is a truth here. — Srap Tasmaner
We find that "Hitler has been executed" is true in y, so the counterfactual evaluates as true in x. — fdrake
talks of the relation between truth and meaning: "It fits and makes fit language to world and world to language." Interestingly he introduces interpretation, Of course the rhs of a true T-sentence is an interpretation of the sentence mentioned on the left, after Davidson. The holism is there, with the addition of an aspect of truth as public, shared or communal, somethign that might be worth further work. — Banno
The basic problem that radical interpretation must address is that one cannot assign meanings to a speaker’s utterances without knowing what the speaker believes, while one cannot identify beliefs without knowing what the speaker’s utterances mean. It seems that we must provide both a theory of belief and a theory of meaning at one and the same time. Davidson claims that the way to achieve this is through the application of the so-called ‘principle of charity’... In Davidson’s work this principle, which admits of various formulations and cannot be rendered in any completely precise form, often appears in terms of the injunction to optimise agreement between ourselves and those we interpret, that is, it counsels us to interpret speakers as holding true beliefs (true by our lights at least) wherever it is plausible to do (see ‘Radical Interpretation’ [1973]). In fact the principle can be seen as combining two notions: a holistic assumption of rationality in belief (‘coherence’) and an assumption of causal relatedness between beliefs – especially perceptual beliefs – and the objects of belief.
Luke also sees this incompleteness, seeing correspondence as explaining only empirical truths, but thinks we might remedy this by treating all truths as empirical. He sees deflation as too conservative, for reasons I was unable to follow.
So a few folk continue to rely on correspondence to explain truth, while a few have come to see it as inadequate. A few folk point to the social nature of language, all good, but not helping with the specific issue of the nature of truth. It's apparent that all language is conventional, except when it isn't, that all language is public, that all language involves interactions with the world as part of a community. None of this helps to isolate what it that is true of truth...
I'll note that the minimal logical structure of truth displayed in a T-sentence is compatible with almost all the views expressed here, and suggest it as a consensus.
Also, we might agree that there is a close relation between meaning and truth. — Banno
I think truth is the exception, per Frege's argument.poses the truth is unanalysable, but what counts as a simple depends on what one is doing, hence what is analysable or not analysable is a question of choice. — Banno
Tarski presents us with an analysis of truth in terms of meaning. — Banno
But I'm not following what you mean by "deflationism is only consensus". — Banno
↪Metaphysician Undercover equates truth and honesty, which is to mistake the logic of truth for its illocutionary force. — Banno
The main idea of the deflationary approach is (a) that all that can be significantly said about truth is exhausted by an account of the role of the expression ‘true’ or of the concept of truth in our talk and thought, and (b) that, by contrast with what traditional views assume, this role is neither metaphysically substantive nor explanatory. — SEP: Deflationism About Truth
If it's an analysis, it's not a particularly informative one. — Tate
The basic problem that radical interpretation must address is that one cannot assign meanings to a speaker’s utterances without knowing what the speaker believes, while one cannot identify beliefs without knowing what the speaker’s utterances mean. It seems that we must provide both a theory of belief and a theory of meaning at one and the same time. Davidson claims that the way to achieve this is through the application of the so-called ‘principle of charity’... In Davidson’s work this principle, which admits of various formulations and cannot be rendered in any completely precise form, often appears in terms of the injunction to optimise agreement between ourselves and those we interpret, that is, it counsels us to interpret speakers as holding true beliefs (true by our lights at least) wherever it is plausible to do (see ‘Radical Interpretation’ [1973]). In fact the principle can be seen as combining two notions: a holistic assumption of rationality in belief (‘coherence’) and an assumption of causal relatedness between beliefs – especially perceptual beliefs – and the objects of belief. — Banno
points to the issue of the incompleteness of coherence theories of truth. — Banno
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