And the final step is to say that the shared model we each access just is the neighbourhood. — Banno
and others are thinking about -- and maybe even posting! -- their own accounts of disagreement? — Srap Tasmaner
We make the most of one another's posts by interpreting them in ways which maximise agreement... — Banno
Consider neighbourhood relativism. Suppose we do not have access to the neighbourhood, but instead only to the models of the neighbourhood.
…you say the fence between our properties is brick, and I say it is wood…
And the final step, back in line, is to point out that the shared model we each access just is the neighbourhood. — Banno
but because the inseparability of model and world means that there are as many empirical worlds as there are models. — Joshs
Suppose we do not have access to the neighbourhood, but instead only to the models of the neighbourhood. — Banno
If the shared model we each access just is the neighbourhood, then how does this account for the disagreement over the fence being brick or wood? — Luke
Edit: I might also simply decide that you use the word "brick" in the way I use the word "wood", that they have the same use. — Banno
If you are asking how they arise, the sources of disagreement are many and various. — Banno
Edit: I might also simply decide that you use the word "brick" in the way I use the word "wood", that they have the same use. — Banno
think apokrisis is decently close to this as well — fdrake
we may have no choice but to give an account of how (a) the model I use, (b) the sentences I utter, and (c) the occasions upon which I utter them, are related. There are multiple possible explanations for the utterance of a sentence not in the model. — Srap Tasmaner
The majority of disagreements are not quibbles about the facts, they are quibbles about the lenses through which we view the world. — fdrake
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.'
— Andrew M
I don't know if Blackwell got this right. — Michael
So he seems quite opposed to the redundancy view. — Michael
Tarski's philosophical goal was to provide a definition of the ordinary notion of truth, that is the notion of truth commonly used in science, mathematics, and everyday discourse. Tarski identified this notion with the classical, correspondence notion of truth, according to which the truth of a sentence consists in its correspondence with reality. Taking Aristotle's formulation as his starting point - "To say of what is that it is not, or of what is not that it is, is false, while to say of what is that it is, and of what is not that it is not, is true." (Aristotle: 1011b25) - Tarski sought to construct a definition of truth that would capture, and give precise content to, Aristotle's conception. — Truth, The Liar, and Tarski's Semantics - Gila Sher (from Blackwell's A Companion to Philosophical Logic)
Makes sense, cheers. Question though. The source uses the word "correspondence" in the context of mapping expressions of language and concerned objects, is that meant as fleshing out a correspondence theory, or is it meant in an informal sense of "an explanatory relation of equivalence" — fdrake
Tarski’s second goal had to do with logical methodology or, as it was called at the time, metamathematics. Metamathematics is the discipline which investigates the formal properties of theories (especially mathematical theories) formulated within the framework of modern logic (first- and higher-order mathematical logic) as well as properties of the logical framework itself. Today we commonly call this discipline ‘meta-logic.’ The notion of truth plays a crucial. if implicit, role in metalogic (e.g. in Gödel's completeness and incompleteness theorems), yet this notion was known to have generated paradox. Tarski's second goal was to demonstrate that ‘truth’ could be used in metalogic in a consistent manner (see Vaught 1974). — Truth, The Liar, and Tarski's Semantics - Gila Sher (from Blackwell's A Companion to Philosophical Logic)
Yes, Tarski endorsed the correspondence theory of truth. — Andrew M
We should like our definition to do justice to the intuitions which adhere to the classical Aristotelian conception of truth-intuitions which find their expression in the well-known words of Aristotle's Metaphysics:
To say of what is that it is not, or of what is not that it is, is false, while to say of what is that it is, or of what is not that it is not, is true.
If we wished to adapt ourselves to modern philosophical terminology, we could perhaps express this conception by means of the familiar formula:
The truth of a sentence consists in its agreement with (or correspondence to) reality.
(For a theory of truth which is to be based upon the latter formulation the term "correspondence theory" has been suggested.)
If, on the other hand, we should decide to extend the popular usage of the term "designate" by applying it not only to names, but also to sentences, and if we agreed to speak of the designate of sentences as "states of affairs," we could possibly use for the same purpose the following phrase:
A sentence is true if it designates an existing state of affairs.
However, all these formulations can lead to various misunderstandings, for none of them is sufficiently precise and clear (though this applies much less to the original Aristotelian formulation than to either of the others); at any rate, none of them can be considered a satisfactory definition of truth. It is up to us to look for a more precise expression of our intuitions.
...
As far as my own opinion is concerned, I do not have any doubts that our formulation does conform to the intuitive content of that of Aristotle. I am less certain regarding the later formulations of the classical conception, for they are very vague indeed.
and we have a more substantial account of truth. — Michael
How isn't it just a more substantial account of p? — bongo fury
To the extent our model of the world is "true" – pragmatically useful – we gain power over the entropy flows of our environments and can bend them to our collective will. — apokrisis
So it seems to me at least that he doesn't endorse the correspondence theory but does endorse the Aristotelian theory, which he thinks of as different. — Michael
Considering everything that's been discussed, I think the focus on truth is a red herring. We take as a starting point "snow is white" is true iff p and then argue over p. I think we should instead take as a starting point snow is white iff q and then argue over q. — Michael
Sure, but if we remove "true" from the equation, then we are off topic of the thread, which is a discussion of truth. — Metaphysician Undercover
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