you're rejecting my claim that the sentence "the kettle is black" means the same thing at T1 and at T2 — Michael
If it's not me painting the kettle red that changes the meaning then what does change the meaning? — Michael
No, I agreed to that. — Isaac
If we want an ephemeral, relativist 'truth', then sure we could compare the 'kettle' of any given conversation to the 'black' in that same conversation. — Isaac
2. — Isaac
Which would be helpful if using were anywhere near as clear as mentioning. — Srap Tasmaner
It's the reason we say the extension of any sentence is it's truth value — Tate
A kettle is not a word. — Michael
A kettle being black is not a sentence. — 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. — Andrew M
You didn't look at the slingshot argument, did you? — Tate
But if I were to take a shot at it, I would say that the “Great Fact” that true sentences refer to is the world. — Michael
Sufficient to get a job done though. If I say "put the kettle on" I don't need you to know if that includes the screw in the drawer. I assume you gather my intent. I could probably have just said "tea time!" — Isaac
If we want an ephemeral, relativist 'truth', then sure we could compare the 'kettle' of any given conversation to the 'black' in that same conversation. — Isaac
But if we want a 'truth' that gets outside of these conversations... Which use are we going to pick? — 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. Even 'molecules' can be disputed. 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"? And so on... — Isaac
(1) "the kettle" is a a referring expression; and
(2) what "the kettle" refers to, or can be used to refer to, is the kettle; and
(3) "the kettle" is an expression, and is not the same as the concrete object the kettle; and
(4) the kettle is a concrete object, and is not the same as the expression "the kettle".
If there's not agreement on this much, we need a different conversation. — Srap Tasmaner
But I hope you can see how each conversation is successful at getting outside itself, in this sense: it is those concrete objects, the kettle and the screwdriver, we were interested in, and which our intentions concerned; the conversation need only fix those as the objects to which we are referring. If every object we were concerned with carried a UUID, and we could keep track of those, we could use those to end up in the same place. — Srap Tasmaner
( 1 ) A total determination of the referent "the kettle" by the underlying collective standards of interpretation.
( 2 ) A partial determination of the referent of "the kettle" by those same standards.
( 3 ) No dependence of the referent of "the kettle" by those same standards.
By the looks of it, no one here is arguing that ( 3 ) is true and no one here is arguing that ( 1 ) is true. (@Michael, correct me if I'm wrong). — fdrake
I might add the obvious point that 'the Earth moves" is both a belief about the Earth and a methodological maxim. It is a belief that will determine the experiments one does.
Beliefs just are "ways of conceptualising and intervening in particular situations". Meaning as use.
I'm not familiar with Joseph Rouse, but you and he seem to have in common the desire to juxtapose two things where there is only one.
— Banno
The act of naming is linguistic, but the thing named is not linguistic. A kettle is not a word. A kettle being black is not a sentence. — Michael
Yep.The referent of "the kettle" is a collectively enacted categorisation of the environment, rather than some environmental object. — fdrake
( 1 ) A total determination of the referent of "the kettle" by the underlying collective standards of interpretation.
( 2 ) A partial determination of the referent of "the kettle" by those same standards.
( 3 ) No dependence of the referent of "the kettle" by those same standards. — fdrake
I take it that Banno has a similar position, but complicates the matter by saying that regardless of the saturation of such interpretations by the categories of language, those expressions nevertheless refer to the kettle because they refer to the kettle in the pragmatic context of the phrase. The environment itself is part of the pragmatic context, and so is the appropriate court of evaluation for statements. You don't have to care about adding molecules to the kettle and severing the reference mechanism of "the kettle" to the kettle, because the necessary enmeshment of world and language is part of how reference works. You can see the expression "the kettle is boiling" both as a string and as what it is used to denote in context. A match between what is referred to, and the properties ascribed to it, and what it denotes in context is a truth, and it says no more to say something is true than this match actually occurring. — fdrake
Let's say that the kettle is boiling is true, what would the proximate cause of that expression's truth be? — fdrake
I would just add that if there is only ‘one thing, pragmatically useful belief, that one thing can’t be split up into a meaning of a belief on the one hand , and its actual contextual application on the other. There is only the one thing, the actual contextual sense. — Joshs
The idea that a kettle is only a way we talk is patently ridiculous; to think that it is not entirely but primarily, or even largely a matter of how we talk is scarcely less so. — Srap Tasmaner
Not at all. Just like a 'race' is any kind of activity which has a start, a finish, and some competitive element, a 'belief that the pub is at the end of the road' is any mental arrangement which results in a tendency to go to the end of the road when wanting to get to the pub. — Isaac
So truth is about how language is used, and far wider than just reference. — Banno
Since the world is all that is the case, there is no escape from our language games. — Banno
But I might go so far as to say that the exact circumstance in which it is correct to deem that "the kettle is boiling" is true are that the kettle is boiling... — Banno
What's that got to do with the slingshot? — Banno
“Clark Kent” refers to Superman but it doesn’t follow from this that if Lois Lane knows that Clark Kent is Clark Kent that she knows that Clark Kent is Superman. Davidson is wrong in asserting that co-referring terms are logically equivalent. — Michael
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