P might subsequently be determined to be false.
— Tate
How? — Luke
Doesn't that make truth relative to a person or society? — Luke
Could you say more about "comes to light"? Is the falsity of T due to a lack of correspondence between T and the world, for example? — Luke
With redundancy, "truth" is just a social sign that generally means endorsement. Correspondence isn't involved. Redundancy is basically saying there's no such thing as truth as people usually conceive it.
Where correspondence is involved, that's not deflationary. — Tate
Can you rephrase that? I don't understand. — Tate
Right, but then for what reason would scientists - or anyone else - ever change their minds about anything? I don't believe that scientists just decide on a whim that T is false all of a sudden, for no reason. — Luke
we know that all our identifications and definitions are static abstractions derived from, filtered from so to speak, our actual experience which is an evershifting succession of images and impressions. Our experience is the territory and the model we have evolved of the world of facts and things is our map, and as the old saw goes 'the map is not the territory'.
The map is tied to the territory by long consideration, historically speaking, of human experience, and conjecture about it, and its meaning, and so forth. But we cannot discursively set the map and territory side by side so to speak to examine the connections, whether purported to be rational or in some sense merely physical, between them.
But we don't need to do that anyway, — Janus
They found evidence — Tate
We non scientists don't know who's right — Tate
I think there are other kinds of deflation that might be compatible with relativism. — Tate
You're saying the world is an idea. In what sense could it be false? — Tate
How else can you know that the one is not the other if not by performing a comparison/contrast between the two purportedly distinct things? In order to compare the two things, you have to know what they both are. The problem, of course, is that you've defined the one in such a way as to suggest that it is impossible to know.
The position reminds me of Kant's Noumena, or any other position that denies direct perception.
Earlier you said it was difficult to talk about these things. I found it to be much easier after abandoning those kinds of frameworks. — creativesoul
Suppose we have a true sentence of the form
S is true IFF p
where S is some sentence and p gives the meaning of S.
What sort of thing is S? well, it's going to be a true proposition (here, continuing the convention adopted from the SEP article on truth of using "proposition" as a carry-all for sentence, statements, utterance, truth-bearer, or whatever one prefers).
And what sort of thing is p? Since the T-sentence is true, it is a state of affairs, a fact. — Banno
The world is a static idea of the totality of facts, things and relations. — Janus
How can you know that if you cannot access it, if your perception and conceptions cannot have purchase on it? — creativesoul
Would like to see a discussion on how the RHS relates to the world — fdrake
It's a parsimonious analysis because all you need is the ability to recognize A situations and to utter S's. We've got both of those, so -- done! — Srap Tasmaner
And the statement S is true (asserted or not) if, and only if, the state of affairs A obtains. — Srap Tasmaner
Putting all this together, we find that S is true iff we by and large say something S-like when we perceive ourselves to be in an A-like situation. This is why Luke suspects that this sort of analysis is just relativism about truth. — Srap Tasmaner
Here's a version of Banno's Davidson's Wittgenstein. — Srap Tasmaner
How else can you know that the one is not the other if not by performing a comparison/contrast between the two purportedly distinct things? In order to compare the two things, you have to know what they both are. The problem, of course, is that you've defined the one in such a way as to suggest that it is impossible to know. — creativesoul
How do I know the world is not my experience? — Janus
In a T-sentence the true proposition on the left is found to be equivalent to the fact on the right.
This does not mean that they are identical.
Nor does it imply that "language and the empirical facts of the world are distinct"; clearly that the kettle is boiling is not the same as "the kettle is boiling", The first is an empirical fact, the second a piece of language. — Banno
I insist that what you call prelinguistic truths or beliefs can be put into propositional form. But I'm tiered of that argument, and hope we might leave it as moot. — Banno
The whole world? What does it look like? — Janus
Starts out wrong with non-linguistic states of affairs and goes down hill from there. — Banno
In giving up dependence on the concept of an uninterpreted reality, something outside all schemes and science, we do not relinquish the notion of objective truth -quite the contrary.
Given the dogma of a dualism of scheme and reality, we get conceptual relativity, and truth relative to a scheme. Without the dogma, this kind of relativity goes by the board. Of course truth of sentences remains relative to language, but that is as objective as can be. In giving up the dualism of scheme and world, we do not give up the world, but reestablish unmediated touch with the familiar objects whose antics make our sentences and opinions true or false
You posited an actual world then clearly stipulated a forbidden access/purchase to/upon that actual world. You then posited your experience as another entity completely unto itself as distinct from the aforementioned 'prelinguistic actual world'. If we have no access to that world, if our words cannot gain purchase upon it, then we cannot possibly compare anything to it.
In order to know the difference between the two, we must have access to both. You've already said that we cannot. That is a problem called untenability. — creativesoul
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