That's also plausible, but at this point, I don't even know how best to characterize what a disagreement over facts is, much less resolve it, much less discern its origin. I want to try to stick to my little model a bit longer to force myself to say exactly what's going on if I can, rather than take anything for granted. — Srap Tasmaner
Right, but q could become an endless string of proposals for the necessary conditions of "truth", as we're already experiencing in this thread anyway. — Metaphysician Undercover
My point is all about bringing logic back into the real world by showing how it is in fact grounded in the brute reality of a pragmatic modelling relation. — apokrisis
...What basis could we have for saying they were both models of the neighbourhood, if they had nothing in common? — Banno
It seems, then, that the models must have something in common if they are to be considered models of the neighbourhood — Banno
This gives free reign to dishonesty, sophistry, and deception, because when these intentions are the prevailing interest (Trumpism for example), they rule as the truth under this definition. — Metaphysician Undercover
I believe there isn't much agreement amongst philosophers on that. — Michael
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
The conception of truth that found its expression in the Aristotelian formulation (and in related formulations of more recent origin) is usually referred to as the classical, or semantic conception of truth. By semantics we mean the part of logic that, loosely speaking, discusses the relations between linguistic objects (such as sentences) and what is expressed by these objects. The semantic character of the term "true" is clearly revealed by the explanation offered by Aristotle and by some formulations that will be given later in this article. One speaks sometimes of the correspondence theory of truth as the theory based on the classical conception. — Truth and Proof - Tarski, 1969
Tarski was certainly critical of modern correspondence formulations, but also said that "One speaks sometimes of the correspondence theory of truth as the theory based on the classical conception.": — Andrew M
I thought something like a simple model of language would be more useful than going round and round about what existing idioms mean. — Srap Tasmaner
I think that's a different subject, interesting in its own right, but not all questions are about how we use words. To hell with that. — Srap Tasmaner
We've been taking as a starting point "snow is white" is true iff p and then discussing p, whereas I think we should instead take as a starting point snow is white iff q and then discuss q.
Snow is white iff snow appears white, or
Snow is white iff snow reflects all wavelengths of light, or
Snow is white iff snow has a mind-independent sui generis property of whiteness
We can then bring this back to truth-predication by understanding that if "p" is true iff p and if p iff q then "p" is true iff q.
"Snow is white" is true iff snow appears white, or
"Snow is white" is true iff snow reflects all wavelengths of light, or
"Snow is white" is true iff snow has a mind-independent sui generis property of whiteness — Michael
I'm not sure where we are — Srap Tasmaner
what is "Pat's house is blue"? Is it an object? Does it have, or lack, the property of being part of our model of Pat's house? We can attempt to go around these questions by saying that the users of the model simply agree to say, or not say, the sentence "Pat's house is blue," without talking about the model at all. By saying or not saying a given sentence, users of a model show that the sentence is, or is not, part of their linguistic model, without actually saying that. — Srap Tasmaner
Since it is always we who imagine or posit this or that about what we think or imagine animals might experience, can we avoid anthropomorphism? — Janus
Just joining in this new trend of quoting one's self rather than one's actual interlocutors. — Isaac
Don't be so snooty. I did it to show the links between posts that were always intended to be linked. — Srap Tasmaner
It was a post for my own amusement. — Isaac
Why do I feel like you may have argued somewhere that all off our posts are for our own respective amusement... — Srap Tasmaner
Why do I feel like you may have argued somewhere that all off our posts are for our own respective amusement... — Srap Tasmaner
on the whole I think our psychologies are such that we don't hold onto beliefs. We don't check them and put them into our box of knowledge. We let go of beliefs as fast as we hold onto them and upon needing them again we re-create them, and they are re-created in light of us speaking to someone. — Moliere
it'd be important to make explicit that truth and knowledge are not mental — Moliere
Knowledge is precisely that belief-like state that persists over time without being recreated, reimagined, or re-experienced. We have imperfect access to the knowledge we possess, and we can lose knowledge, but the knowledge we possess we possess continuously. — Srap Tasmaner
But that would mean we still disagree on psychologies, even when we are talking about the mental -- where basically I think of memory and beliefs-held as a creative process that is re-enacted, you'd say that we can recall the real knowledge we have and that that at least is not a re-creation, but a has-been-created. — Moliere
It strikes me that these ideas are not in direct conflict. This is because it could be the case that a continual behavioural disposition comes equipped with the ability to recreate the state of mind and action to exhibit what is believed as a transitory state. — fdrake
Even if you want to say, as I've been inclined to lately, that knowledge is not a kind of belief but a "first class" mental state in its own right, distinct from belief -- which is enough to keep our positions from conflicting -- we may still want to say that knowledge entails belief. (I'm undecided, but I see the appeal.) If S knows p, then S believes p -- and that can be true even if you don't analyze knowledge as belief + some other stuff. — Srap Tasmaner
I guess this is why nobody can agree on whether he was a correspondence theorist or not. Ironically he's less clear and unequivocal than we'd like. — Michael
For me, then, to know is to be certain — Janus
And the problem with that would be...? — Isaac
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