Hey? What argument? — Banno
Meaningful correspondence to fact is not, and that is where convention has gone completely wrong. The reason:Not having gotten belief(or meaning) right to begin with. Stuck analyzing propositions and attitudes towards them. — creativesoul
the famous possibly apocryphal example of someone flipping off Wittgenstein, "What is the logical structure of this gesture?" — fdrake
With any theory of truth, you look for certain criteria to determine truth or falsehood. For instance, with correspondence theory, you look for correspondence between an idea and reality. Specifically, you need to determine if it's true that correspondence exists. — Tate
Too many replies, and I'm off to the hardware store. Good to see a consensus developing, even if it is "Banno is wrong..."
Now, if you folk could just agree as to where I am wrong... — Banno
It was Piero Sraffa, and it's almost certainly true. He was a very original thinker. (I read his book a lifetime ago.) They were friends at Cambridge. — Srap Tasmaner
There is, as a kind of ground to all our propositions, truths and facts, a pre-linguistic actuality to which they must submit. Analysis and conceptualization cannot gain purchase on that actuality, because to do so is to bring it into the linguistic domain, and there all we have purchase on is our communal perceptions and conceptions of what is the case, — Janus
Analysis and conceptualization cannot gain purchase on that actuality... — Janus
Think it's Davidson rather than Tarski. Tarski's work came out of considerations for formal languages right, — fdrake
This, perhaps, is the point Sam26 makes when he says that the T-schema is irrelevant? — Michael
In § 1 colloquial Ianguage is the object of our investigations. The results are entirely negative. With respect to this language not only does the definition of truth seem to be impossible, but even the consistent use of this concept in conformity with the laws of logic.
...
If these observations are correct, then the very possibility of a consistent use of the expression 'true sentence' which is in harmony with the laws of logic and the spirit of everyday language seems to be very questionable, and consequently the same doubt attaches to the possibility of constructing a correct definition of this expression.
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For the reasons given in the preceding section I now abandon the attempt to solve our problem for the language of everyday life and restrict myself henceforth entirely to formalized languages.
You've also got the weirdness that comes from convention T working for factual, declarative language and using it to, generically, set out the meaning of non-factual, non-declarative language through how the sentence somehow 'pictures' the relevant state of affairs. EG, like you can elucidate the speech act of flipping someone off through ""fdrake flipped someone off" is true if and only if fdrake flipped someone off". — fdrake
Convention T. A formally correct definition of the symbol 'Tr', formulated in the metalanguage, will be called an adequate definition of truth if it has the following consequences:
1. all sentences which are obtained from the expression 'x E Tr if and only if p' by substituting for the symbol 'x' a structural-descriptive name of any sentence of the language in question and for the symbol 'p' the expression which forms the translation of this sentence into the metalanguage;
2. the sentence 'for any x, if x E Tr then x E S'.
A propositional attitude is a mental state held by an agent toward a proposition. — Wikipedia
And yet, they are correct. I mean, you would not disagree that ('p' is true IFF p), would you?
So their use might be in providing some sort of grounding in relating meaning to truth. — Banno
Now, if you folk could just agree as to where I am wrong... — Banno
1. "p" is X iff p
Does (1) tell us the meaning of "X"? If not then the T-schema doesn't tell us the meaning of "true". It sets out the condition under which "p" is true, but nothing more.
This, perhaps, is the point Sam26 makes when he says that the T-schema is irrelevant? — Michael
And, as I've mention before, this highlights the fact that Tarski didn't offer the T-schema as a definition of truth, but as a consequence of a correct definition. As I mentioned here, we still need an actual definition of "true". — Michael
With any theory of truth, you look for certain criteria to determine truth or falsehood. For instance, with correspondence theory, you look for correspondence between an idea and reality. Specifically, you need to determine if it's true that correspondence exists.
This means that in order to make sense of correspondence theory, you'll need to already know what truth is. — Tate
I get caught by a question from my old lecturer, something like "You are looking for the meaning of some utterance. If you have set out an extensional equivalence that shows exactly what is needed for the utterance to be true, what more could you need?" — Banno
I get caught by a question from my old lecturer, something like "You are looking for the meaning of some utterance. If you have set out an extensional equivalence that shows exactly what is needed for the utterance to be true, what more could you need?" — Banno
The result seems to be that whatever is missing from the analysis performed by the T-sentence is stuff that cannot be said. — Banno
That's a neat potted summation of that part of Davidson's early work. Well done and thank you. It's gratifying to be talking to someone with a bit of background. — Banno
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