but that if you understand how to construct a T-sentences of any sentence in the language, then you understand that language.hence the claim that if you understand all the T-sentences of a language, then you understand that language — Srap Tasmaner
is not the question; it's rather if you can construct a T-sentence for any sentence in the language, what is it that you have not understood?if you understand all the T-sentences of a language, do you also understand a world? — Srap Tasmaner
Holism in some form follows if one accepts the Tarski's idea that a theory of truth must generate a sentence of the form "S" is true IFF X for every sentence of the object language. — Banno
if you understand how to construct a T-sentences of any sentence in the language, then you understand that language. — Banno
The issue, as I see it, is that observational data and evidence should inform our philosophy. When there's a conflict, that's a signal that we need to check our premises. — Andrew M
Allows you to conclude p from Kp, but doesn't tell you whether Kp is true. It is indeed just a logical principle along the lines of modus ponens, which also can't tell you that your premises are true. Does that make modus ponens useless? — Srap Tasmaner
The proposition "I remember that today is Joe's birthday", does not necessitate the conclusion that today is Joe's birthday, without the added premise that my memory is infallible. — Metaphysician Undercover
The conclusion, that today is Joe's birthday does not follow necessarily from the premise "I remember that today is Joe's birthday", because there is no premise to relate "I remember", to what "is" — Metaphysician Undercover
I think where we differ is that I interpret the pragmatic context as part of the function, and the function itself isn't situated within a body, it's situated between bodies, in the environment, and within bodies - like with Srap Tasmaner 's comment about externalism vs internalism of semantic content. I don't think "the science" sides with either side on that, at least not yet, so it remains a site of substantive philosophical disagreement. — fdrake
I lean toward (2), but I just don't know enough to say. — Srap Tasmaner
I keep thinking there's something of interest there in truth as a sort of identity function. Have you noticed that it works for anything you might count as a truth-value? It works for "unknown," it works for "likely" or "probably," even for numerical probabilities. Whatever you plug in for the truth-value of p, that's the truth-value of p is true. If you think of logic as a sort of algebra, that makes the is-true operator (rather than predicate) kind of interesting.
I don't agree that it requires a set of shared 'meanings' which are then reified to some objective status with sufficient specificity to be amenable to truth analysis. We can invent gestures on the hoof and still be understood. If there's a language barrier, certain words are quickly learned (and what is learned, is what the word does). — Isaac
Bring this back to 'Truth', the notion that "X is true" can be checked by examining the properties of X relies on 'X' referring to some fixed set of properties. But 'X' doesn't refer to a fixed set of properties. — Isaac
'X' doesn't refer at all, it's a type of action that gets a job done, it doesn't refer any more than lifting my arm does. — Isaac
(2) Semantics in terms of truth conditions, and the T-schema is the semantics of "is true". That's it; that's all it can be. — Srap Tasmaner
I lean toward (2), but I just don't know enough to say. — Srap Tasmaner
You cannot know what is not so. You cannot see what is not there. You cannot remember what did not happen. You cannot regret doing what you did not do. — Srap Tasmaner
Logic doesn't guarantee the truth of what you say, but connects one truth to another. — Srap Tasmaner
if you did state those premises, "if you know it then it is true" — Metaphysician Undercover
Is "p" is foo iff p the semantics of "is foo"? — Michael
I think, yes, that is the semantics of "is foo." It says, in plain English, that whatever the truth conditions of p are, those are the truth conditions of 'p' is foo, and vice versa. And it's also obvious that any such predicate "is foo" is equivalent to "is true," that there is a unique identity function on truth-values, and thus a unique identity function on truth conditions. — Srap Tasmaner
And it's also obvious that any such predicate "is foo" is equivalent to "is true," that there is a unique identity function on truth-values, and thus a unique identity function on truth conditions. — Srap Tasmaner
So you're saying that these are equivalent?
1. "p" is true iff p
2. "'p' is true" means "p" — Michael
Are these equivalent?
1. "p" is true iff p
2. "p" is a true sentence iff p
3. "p" is a sentence iff p — Michael
They can't all be true at the same time, because the use of "sentence" in (2) conflicts with its use in (3), doesn't it? — Srap Tasmaner
If you take take means as has the same extension as, then yes. Otherwise, no, or depends. — Srap Tasmaner
So "p" and "'p' is true" have the same extension but might have a different intension? — Michael
the timeworn example of the two terms "creature with a kidney" and "creature with a heart" does show that two terms can have the same extension and yet differ in intension.
Conversely, if a proposition p entails a contradiction, p is false. We can only know what is false; truth, on this view, is indeterminable. — Agent Smith
If we know that p is false then we know that not-p is true. — Michael
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