You say that the truth of "the kettle is black " depends on both that the kettle is black and that some hidden value is in such and such a state — Isaac
Therefore, there are no boiling kettles outside of language, either? — Luke
The kettle itself — Luke
I don't believe there's much controversy about what a kettle is. — Luke
Boiling point — Luke
Redundancy without realism leads to relativism and a disconnection of language from the facts of the world. If you accept realism, then you also accept some form of facts, correspondence and truthmaking. — Luke
what is the point of testing a theory in science? — Luke
kettle being black depends on the existence of particular particles at particular locations in space. This has nothing to do with language (even if language is required to talk about it). — Michael
the kettle being black depends on the occurrence of a particular sensory experience — Michael
get wet when I stand out in the rain — Michael
What particular particles? Do they include the screw in the drawer or not? — Isaac
What sensory experience? The one I say is that of a kettle, or the one you say is that of a kettle? — Isaac
Do you? Or do you get damp when you stand out in drizzle? If you're wearing a coat are you still getting wet? Does the sentence "I didn't really get wet, just a bit damp" make no sense to you? — Isaac
still requires that there is something in addition to the sentences "it is raining" and "the kettle is black" for these sentences to be true. Truth depends on more than just language. — Michael
The kettle itself; not merely talk about a kettle. — Luke
The truth of "the kettle is black" depends on both the meaning of the sentence "the kettle is black" and on the kettle being black, the latter being a non-linguistic, material feature of the world (assuming materialism for the sake of argument). — Michael
I agree with that. My recent comments are a response to @Tate saying that "truth is a matter of comparing a statement to another statement". — Michael
A sentence like "the kettle is black" isn't made true by another sentence, but by the existence of a particular material object — Michael
Did I? Where? — Michael
Any nonlinguistic feature? — Isaac
Sure — Michael
was a mistake. — Michael
Does this particular matter the kettle depends on include the screw in the drawer or not? — Isaac
I think the world consists of those objects we, collectively, identify with our forms of life (our language, for modern humans). So the kettle is definitely an object in the world, in that sense. But that's not this world-outside-language that Luke and @Michael seem to be reaching for. — Isaac
But it's still the case that whichever matter we decide 'counts' as being the kettle must exist for the sentence "the kettle exists" to be true. — Michael
Yes. But since it could be literally any matter at all, to claim that the truth of any sentence involving kettles depends on this fact would render all statements about kettles always true, since there's always some matter. — Isaac
if it is so identified, identified by the use of language, and by our forms of life more broadly, as the man said, then it is the thing in that sense identified by our use of the expression "the kettle". — Srap Tasmaner
If it's not, then there has been no collective identifying of something by use of the expression "the kettle". — Srap Tasmaner
The sentence "the kettle is black" is true at T1. I paint the kettle red at T2. The sentence "the kettle is black" is false at T1. — Michael
Is it. — Isaac
For the sake of argument we have fixed the referent of the phrase "the kettle" (and "black", and "red") such that the truth value of "the kettle is black" is unambiguously true at T1 — Michael
The meaning of the sentence didn't change at T2 but its truth value did. Therefore, the truth value of the sentence depends on more than just its meaning. — Michael
Yes, but naming it doesn't affect what it is. 200,000 years ago, snow wasn't named "snow", and the color white wasn't named "white", yet snow was still white. At least, so the scientists tell us. — Andrew M
Redundancy doesn't reject realism, nor need it be relativistic. You might say, as I do, that some hidden state constrains our neural models of it. You might also say, as I would, that we have an interest in those neural models being at least similar in function so that we can cooperate over manipulating those hidden states. You might also say that language is used (among other things) as a tool to this end. But since all of this goes on subconsciously, most of the time, and, most importantly, those putative 'hidden states' are simply hypothetical matters used in a scientific model of how brains work, there's simply not a mechanism by which they can act as truth-makers for sentence in English, without being entirely subsumed by simply 'the kettle is black'. — Isaac
Doesn't that just beg the question a little — Isaac
you posit a stable neural network, or some such thing, as a stable "thing", which would support repetition of the same, or similar mental activity, constituting the thing which others might call a "belief". — Metaphysician Undercover
You agreed above that we can decide what words mean. So, for the sake of this example, we decide that the screw in the draw is not part of the kettle, and to use a spectrophotometer to measure the kettle's colour, agreeing which range of results indicates the kettle being black and not-black. — Michael
The meaning of the sentence "the kettle is black" didn't change at T2 — Michael
its truth value depends on — Michael
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