You want the kettle's boiling to be true yet uninterpreted. — Banno
Substitute any sentence you like for P. — Banno
I agree, so long as you do not conclude that there are no true statements. — Banno
I'm interested in the idea of dropping the will to truth — Tate
I'm interested in the idea of dropping the will to truth
— Tate
You hush your postmodern mouth! — Srap Tasmaner
The rejection of correspondence does not imply the acceptance of truth as will to power. — Banno
And as said elsewhere, the power of truth derives from its illocutionary force, while the topic here has been the logical structure of true statements. — Banno
SO are you going to argue that what makes a statement true is one's willing it to be true? That might be fun. — Banno
Indeed, you need it to be raining. Which is already to interpret the world, to use language.
That is, for "it is raining" to be true, it needs to be raining.
Which is the exact point made by the T-sentence.
SO what, if anything, is our disagreement? — Banno
I thought you were done here. — Banno
Whether the kettle is material or ideal "drops out", regardless of the speaker -- the sentence works whether you append the metaphysical belief onto it or not. And, in fact, it'd be more confusing if we appended our metaphysical beliefs to our theories of truth because then we'd just be begging the question in favor of what we already believe (one motivation for developing truth sans-metaphysics is that it might allow us to actually talk metaphysics in a more productive way) — Moliere
As far as I understand it, the deflationary view is that truth isn't a property, or if it is then it isn't a substantial property. The sentence "'snow is white' is true" is nothing more (or not much more) than the sentence "snow is white".
It doesn't say anything about whether or not snow being white is a material fact. — Michael
It's as if you are of the opinion that a deflationary account does not permit sentences to be about how things are. Hence you think it leads to truth relativism, that sentences are true regardless of how things are, that water doesn't boil at 100℃, and that deflationist amounts to talk unmoored from the facts. — Banno
Deflation does not seek to make kettles and boiling water disappear, or to unmoor the words "kettle" and "boiling" from their use. — Banno
It's just about the way the word "true" works. it's the observation that "It is true that the kettle is boiling" is the same, in certain specifiable ways, as "the kettle is boiling". That specification is still that both sentences are true exactly if the kettle is boiling. — Banno
You've conflated the facts with the use of words here. The use of a sentence does not boil water. — Luke
How does this differ from the correspondence theory? — Luke
I am curious why naming plays no part in Tarski's T-sentence, as naming seems to affect the truth or falsity of the T-sentence itself. Am I missing something ? — RussellA
A sentence such as "snow is white" is true if in the sentential sentence "x is white", x is satisfied by snow.
200,000 years ago snow had not been named. Today, snow has been named, whether "white" in English or "schnee" in German. Therefore, there must have been a point in time when snow was named "snow", ie, what Kripke calls "baptised". — RussellA
Before naming snow as "snow" and white as "white"
As "white" didn't exist, in the sentential function "x is white", there is no x that satisfies "white", therefore "snow is white" can never be true.
After naming snow as "snow" and white as "white"
As snow has been named "snow" and white has been named "white", in the sentential function "x is white", x is always satisfied by snow. Therefore, "snow is white" is always true.
In summary, the T-sentence is false before snow had been named "snow" and white named "white". The T-sentence is always true after snow had been named "snow" and white named "white". IE, the T-sentence itself may be either true or false dependant upon how its parts have been named. — RussellA
How does this differ from the deflationary theory? '"the kettle is boiling" is true' just says that the kettle is boiling. — Banno
Deflationism rejects correspondence - specifically, the correspondence between a truth bearer and the facts - doesn't it? — Luke
You've conflated the facts with the use of words here. The use of a sentence does not boil water.
— Luke
Not conflating so much as recognising. — Banno
it is still the case that a sentence’s truth value also depends on something which isn’t that, or another, sentence. — Michael
Again, you failed to respond to the argument that sentences are not kettles and that using sentences does not boil water. You want to collapse the distinction between the facts and language use, but you offer no response to this. — Luke
Again, you failed to respond to the argument that sentences are not kettles and that using sentences does not boil water. You want to collapse the distinction between the facts and language use, but you offer no response to this.
— Luke
I used Ramsey's arguments against Russell in my response to Michael (or at least, my interpretation of it). It answers the same question you're asking here. If something 'outside' of language constitutes the 'kettle' regarding which we're assessing the truth of some property, then what is it? — Isaac
Redundancy doesn't reject realism, nor need it be relativistic. — Isaac
Deflationists maintain that correspondence theories need to be deflated; that their central notions, correspondence and fact (and their relatives), play no legitimate role in an adequate account of truth and can be excised without loss. — SEP article on The Correspondence Theory of Truth
Is the boiling kettle true, or is the statement about the boiling kettle true? — Luke
what is the difference between the correspondence theory and a redundancy that doesn't reject realism? — Luke
The boiling kettle can't be 'true' since there are no matters, outside of language, which could make it so. — Isaac
If something 'outside' of language constitutes the 'kettle' regarding which we're assessing the truth of some property, then what is it? — Isaac
You might say "it's that collection of molecules" or something, but I could disagree and say that it properly includes some additional molecules nearby, or historically attached. No fact of the world could resolve that disagreement — Isaac
Is "boiling" exactly at gaseous states, or is it when the water visibly bubbles, or is that just 'simmering'? Does 'boiling' require a lot more bubbles? How much of the water in the kettle has to be gaseous for it to be "boiling"? — Isaac
We don't seem to have a connection between the causes of our language use and the language itself which are specific enough to act as truth-makers for any language use. — Isaac
A sentence cannot 'correspond' to something other than by definition, and definition is not specific enough to hook into whatever hidden states we might theorise constrain it. — Isaac
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