Arguably, since they are directly about sentences and not about kettles, 3 and 5 might be called linguistic facts. But on that criteria, 1 is directly about kettles, not sentences. — Banno
SO how can it be that: "(1) isn't the fact that the kettle is boiling". — Banno
You seem to be unable to separate use from mention. — Michael
The correct translation of (2) is "the kettle is boiling" is true. The incorrect translation of (2) is the kettle is boiling is true. — Michael
That's the bit directly above that seems to be untenable in the same way that Kant's Noumena is. — creativesoul
You can't seem to make up your mind. — Tate
But on that criteria, 1 is directly about kettles, not sentences.
There are, it seems, folk who think that we need an item 0 in this list, a state of affairs or an exterior thing in itself, outside of language or perception or belief or some other; and that it is this item 0 that is the fact, which is represented (or some such...) in item 1.
And when you ask them what item 0 is, the answer is something like that it is the kettle boiling.
But that's item 1. — Banno
So what does the proposition say? Why, it says that the kettle is boiling...
But that bit in bold is a proposition... — Banno
(1) says "The kettle is boiling" and (2) says "La bouilloire est en ébullition". — Michael
If it points to anything, it points to itself. — Banno
You made the mistake of asserting that the world can somehow be false. By definition, it can't.
It went down hill from there. — Tate
The RHS is a linguistic expression that can be in accordance with, correspond to, this collectively represented world or not. — Janus
Remember the RHS is not to be thought of in this context as a linguistic expression,. — Janus
You can't seem to make up your mind. — Tate
If the world is a collective representation, why can it not be false. — Janus
I'm not saying the world as a whole could be false, but that even some things which are taken to be facts might turn out to be inconsistent with subsequent experience. — Janus
If the world is a collective representation, why can it not be false. — Janus
I'm not saying the world as a whole could be false, but that even some things which are taken to be facts might turn out to be inconsistent with subsequent experience. — Janus — Tate
This, my friend, is garbled. I think we're done here. — Tate
Yes, I see. And that is the objection I've had to Pie's position from the outset - that the truth bearer, P, is not identical to the fact that P describes. So P is not identical with the world, otherwise we are still talking about a sentence. But if we maintain the distinction between sentence and world, and if P is equivalent to the world, then I don't see how that's different to correspondence.
— Luke
I see what you mean I think! Would like to see a discussion on how the RHS relates to the world, and how it differs to correspondence. — fdrake
Correspondence and disquotation
Some philosophers regard semantic notions as disquotational notions: a sentence enclosed in quotation marks has the property of being true iff this sentence, its quotation marks removed, holds (Ramsey 1927). Tarski, however, views the two analyses as equivalent:
"A characteristic feature of the semantical concepts is that they give expression to certain relations between the expressions of language and the objects about which these expressions speak, or that by means of such relations they characterize certain classes of expressions or other objects. We could also say (making use of the suppositio materialis) that these concepts serve to set up the correlation between the names of expressions and the expressions themselves." (Tarski 1933: 252)
We can explain Tarski's view as follows: There are two modes of speech, an objectual mode and a linguistic mode ('material' mode, in Medieval terminology). The correspondence idea can be expressed in both modes. It is expressed by:
'Snow is white' is true iff snow is white
as well as by:
' "Snow is white" is true' is equivalent to 'Snow is white.'
In the objectual mode we say that a sentence attributing the (physical) property of whiteness to the (physical) stuff snow is true iff the (physical) stuff snow has the (physical) property of whiteness; in the linguistic mode we say that a sentence attributing (the semantic property of) truth to a sentence attributing whiteness to snow is equivalent to a sentence attributing whiteness to snow. — Truth, The Liar, and Tarski's Semantics - Gila Sher (from Blackwell's A Companion to Philosophical Logic)
Obviously linguistics played a part in the stove's creation, but the fact that stove exists, is just like any other fact of existence for the cat, and the cat's belief. What if we removed all humans from existence, but there still existed stoves, would there still be an overlap between the cat's belief and language? What if someone created a stove, ceased to exist, then cats came into existence later, would you still say that the cat's belief overlapped language? I don't see any reason to think that the cat's belief has a linguistic component simply because some language user created the stove. The stove is just another fact of reality, like a tree or the moon... — Sam26
1. The kettle is boiling
2. "The kettle is boiling"
3. "The kettle is boiling" is true
4. '"The kettle is boiling" is true'
5. '"The kettle is boiling is true' is true
Previously I've felt obliged to explain that 1, 3 and 5 in this list are facts.
Arguably, since they are directly about sentences and not about kettles, 3 and 5 might be called linguistic facts. But on that criteria, 1 is directly about kettles, not sentences. — Banno
There are, it seems, folk who think that we need an item 0 in this list, a state of affairs or an exterior thing in itself, outside of language or perception or belief or some other; and that it is this item 0 that is the fact, which is represented (or some such...) in item 1.
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