I don't understand what you mean.Wait--aside from switching "event" out for "entity," you're arguing that that it can't be the case that x just in case it was possible that not-x. — Terrapin Station
If statement A and B do correspond to actuality, then they do, and if they do not, then they do not. Of course it is logically possible that they might not have both corresponded to the same event, but in that case actuality would have been different. Possibility has nothing to do with actual correspondence, though, as far as I can tell. — John
Possibility has a lot to do with correspondence in general, because claims about possibility follow logically from the definition of correspondence (and therefore I have a full right to use premises about possibility when arguing against correspondence).Possibility has nothing to do with actual correspondence, though, as far as I can tell. — John
x is the event of Caesar's dying,
y is the event of Caesar's being murdered, — Pierre-Normand
It follows from the definition of correspondence that if two propositions corresponds to the same entity when true, then they are the same proposition, but "Caesar died" and "Caesar was murdered" are not the same proposition.They are the same event iff Caesar was murdered. " Caesar died" and "Caesar was murdered" are different statements about the event is all. They bear a different relation to one another: if the second statement is true then the first necessarily is. but the obverse does not follow. What's the point of trying to complicate it? — John
They are the same event iff Caesar was murdered. — John
It still does not seem to be the case that the actual event makes the Claim that Caesar was murdered true. — Pierre-Normand
I didn't say this, I only said that the propositions "Caesar died" and "Caesar was murdered" are different, but the event to which they refer is the same (but of course they could've referred to different events).You seem to be saying that the event of Caesar dying cannot be the same event as Caesar being murdered — John
I can't see that, because assuming that Caesar was murdered then it is his being murdered that makes "Caesar was murdered" true, and that also makes Caesar's dying and Caesar's being murdered the very same event. — John
I didn't say this, I only said that the propositions "Caesar died" and "Caesar was murdered" are different, but the event to which they refer is the same (but of course they could've referred to different events). — Fafner
But what I did claim is that if you have two different proposition, then by the definition of correspondence, they cannot have the same entity corresponding to them when true. So having two different propositions with the same corresponding entity (as in the case of "Caesar died" and "Caesar was murdered") contradicts the definition, and renders the theory incoherent. — Fafner
No, I treat events as entities for the sake of argument.Are you attempting to draw a distinction between "events" and "entities"? — John
Sure, but I don't see how this helps (actually this fact is precisely what explains the reason that correspondence fails: descriptions don't overlap neatly with unique entities, because you can have the same entity satisfying many descriptions, and so you cannot define the truth of descriptions by simply referring to the entities which they describe).But despite their ability to correspond or not, they are both only partial descriptions of the event, no? — John
Well either a proposition corresponds to an entity or it doesn't, what other options are there?You seem to be thinking in some absolutist terms of correspondence, which would seem to have little or nothing to do with the ordinary logic of correspondence. — John
Well either a proposition corresponds to an entity or it doesn't, what other options are there? — Fafner
Sure, but I don't see how this helps. — Fafner
OK, it seems now you are saying that it is a matter of interpretation as to whether he was murdered or justifiably assassinated, or something like that? If that's so, it's a different question, and could be gotten around simply by saying that he was killed. — John
I give up.The point is that any statement's correspondence to an event cannot ever be complete, but that that fact in no way rules out the possibility of correspondence. Nothing you have said seems to show that incompleteness of correspondence renders the idea contradictory, inconsistent or incoherent. — John
But the apple itself doesn't make both claims true quite appart from it's falling under the corresponding predicates. — Pierre-Normand
Characteristics of the apple; its sweetness and its redness separately make those corresponding statements true. It is that entity, that apple, which is both red and sweet. Just as with the two statements: that Caesar died and that he was murdered, it is the corresponding characteristics of that event that make them true. — John
Well either a proposition corresponds to an entity or it doesn't, what other options are there? — Fafner
But what if Caesar had not been murdered but died a natural death? In this case it seems that "Caesar died" would have its own truthmaker (distinct from the truthmaker of "Caesar was murdered"), and this will contradict the basic idea of correspondence that for any proposition, there's a unique entity that makes it true if it is the case (because "Caesar died" is the same propositions no matter how he died, but on your account it looks like two different propositions).A proposition such as "Caesar died" might be true not because it has a truth-maker of its own, but because it is entailed by a proposition such as "Caesar was murdered" that does have a truth-maker. — Srap Tasmaner
What you are missing is the fact that given a particular interpretation of the sentence 'cats fly', it is objectively true or false; and the mere fact that the sentence can express something different doesn't show that its truth is subjective. — Fafner
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