↪Sam26 repeats mention of the social aspect of language, combined with what looks like the picture theory of meaning. Truth is defined negatively, "If the proposition misses the mark, or does not accomplish its goal, as a picture or a correlate of reality, then it is false". — Banno
From the Heidegger angle... — fdrake
refuses to let truth get a grip on the world, restricting it to "what is perceived or conceived to be the case", and so is answering the question "what is belief" rather than "what is truth". The oblique references to the communal and utilitarian nature of language remain. — Banno
I think my view is a bit more nuanced than your interpretation. — Sam26
I also said, "If the proposition misses the mark, or does not accomplish its goal, as a picture or a correlate of reality, then it is false." How you get from this remark to "truth is defined negatively" is beyond me. — Sam26
There is no one definition of truth that will satisfy every use in our language. — Sam26
You've misunderstood. — Janus
what is the world if not "what is perceived or conceived to be the case" — Janus
On this we agree, so far as substantive definitions. The idea that there could be a single or algorithmic definition of truth is self-defeating. T-sentences just point to the relation between use and truth. — Banno
Davidson in particular, in this case, and leading to the quite different conclusion by ridding us of the model. — Banno
The world is what is the case*. It's being perceived or conceived is irrelevant.
It seems yours is the only openly antirealist view. Kudos. — Banno
↪creativesoul continues the rejection of truth in favour of belief. Something to do with a correspondence between a mouse going behind a tree and biological machinery. I had difficulty following the discussion. — Banno
And the connection between meaning and use is not just taking a popular vote for meanings. — Banno
"What is the case" is meaningless beyond what is communally perceived and conceived to be the case. — Janus
Would be interested in seeing how you'd flesh out the model disappearing. — fdrake
The cat can be hunting a mouse and that would be the case, even if there were no one around... ever. Focusing upon the words, their meaning, and what language takes misses the point here... completely. — creativesoul
Janus, while that is true, it is also true that "cat" is meaningless beyond what is communally perceived and conceived to be a cat. — creativesoul
The cat can be hunting a mouse and that would be the case, even if there were no one around... ever. — creativesoul
That kettle is boiling isn't a model of how things are, but just how things are. "The kettle is boiling" might be considered a model. — Banno
This is a very tricky thing to talk about. — Janus
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.