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. — Fafner
No, that's not the case, because to be objectively true or false, requires that there is an objective reality which the interpretation of the sentence either corresponds with, or does not. But there is no such thing. The so-called "objective reality" only exists as interpreted. There is no reality without a perspective, so any reality which would be judged as corresponding to an interpretation, is itself subjective because it is dependent on a perspective. — Metaphysician Undercover
On the one hand we have the words, the sentence, "cats fly", which needs to be interpreted. On the other hand, we have the reality which "cats fly" is supposed to correspond with, and this needs to be interpreted as well. Therefore you cannot say that there is an objective truth or falsity to any interpretation of the sentence because reality, what is real, needs to be interpreted as well, in order that it does or does not correspond to the interpretation of the sentence. — Metaphysician Undercover
And that's it. My goal is a tool to handle beliefs. Beliefs do not have to be true at all to be beliefs. They merely need to be believed. The difficulty - my difficulty - is with people who represent their beliefs as being true, and acting on them as if they were. — tim wood
And another thing: you argument attempts to establish a metaphysical conclusion ("there's no objective reality") from epistemic premises (all the stuff that you say about interpretation), but this is invalid. — Fafner
Even if you were correct that all interpretation is subjective (and you are not), it wouldn't follow that objective reality doesn't exist. At best, it could only show that reality cannot be known by us, but its existence is a different matter. It's like arguing that since we don't know if there is life on Mars, then it follows that there is no life on Mars. — Fafner
Then see my other comment above.That there is no objective reality is the premise, not the conclusion. — Metaphysician Undercover
Well no, it doesn't follow. If by "subjective assumption" you mean something like an unjustified or ungrounded belief, then this doesn't show that the belief itself isn't objectively true. It may be the case that my belief that there is life on Mars is ungrounded or unjustified, and yet it still can be the case that it is itself objectively true, and there is life on Mars. Here you are surely trying to derive a metaphysical conclusion from epistemic premises.This premise is supported by the fact that any assumption of an objective reality, is an assumption made by a subject. Therefore the assumption of an objective reality is itself subjective, and this negates the assumption that the reality being assumed is objective, because the assumption itself is subjective. The conclusion, which follows from this, is that there is no objective truth. Truth is subjective. — Metaphysician Undercover
I'm not trying to prove to you anything about the objective reality (I have better things to do), but only to show you that your arguments don't work, which is different. I don't have to demonstrate that truth is objective (or that there is an objective reality) in order to show that your arguments that truth is subjective are unsound.Unless the assumption of an objective reality can be made to be sound, then any claim of an objective truth is equally unsound, because this relies on the assumption of an objective reality. You are claiming that there is objective truth, so the onus is on you to support this claim by validating your claim of an objective reality. — Metaphysician Undercover
As my example about the existence of life on Mars shows, you cannot make this inference. The fact that the word 'subject' appears in 'subjective', doesn't license you to treat everything that a subject says as itself subjective. You are equivocating between words with different meaning, and this is a blatant logical fallacy (it's like inferring something about the banks of a river from claims about banks as financial institutions, just on the grounds they are spelled the same).This claim is just made by you, and you are a subject and therefore the claim is subjective. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't understand what you mean. — Fafner
I asked:
What would it take in order for us to be able to sensibly say something like "X is in the world and it corresponds with 'X'?
You replied:
Well, the first problem is that it is simply unclear what 'correspondence' is supposed to be. It is very hard if not impossible to give an non circular or non trivial analysis for the term, therefore it is not very clear what the theory even says.
I wrote:
If the truth or falsity of "X" is dependent upon interpretation, and there are three different interpretations of "X", all of which conflict with one another, then it would follow that "X" can be both true and false at the same time.
"X" cannot be both, true and false, at the same time.
Thus, it is not the case that the truth or falsity of "X" is dependent upon interpretation.
QED.
You replied:
I like this a lot! It seems to me, though, that this and much of this part of the discussion has ignored the notion of incomplete specification, not only about the content of propositions, but as well their interpretations.
This is about meaning v. usage; let's stick with meaning. Let proposition P be appropriately well-formed and meaningful, for present purpose, but not a complete specification of whatever it happens to be about. The expressions P and ~P are, then, are contingent subject to the complete specification of P, whenever that should happen, or be agreed on.
Unrecognized/unacknowledged contingency can cripple discussion. The cure is the recognition that significant questions require some care on approach, and very likely a preliminary definitions section. With these there is a chance that disputants at least may start on the same page.
In consideration of Caeser, above, while it's true not all deaths are from murders, it is certainly true that all murders result in a death; so this, then, is merely a usage problem.
Bottom line, I suppose, is that nearly all Ps that are taken as meaning(ful) are in fact contingent. Converting most of them into a univocal form either by complete specification or definition ranges from impractical to impossible. Fortunately in many cases that effort is also unnecessary.
If the truth or falsity of "X" is dependent upon interpretation, and there are three different interpretations of "X", all of which conflict with one another, then it would follow that "X" can be both true and false at the same time. — creativesoul
You wrote:
And if the correspondence theorist will accept your suggestion that the same entity can make two different propositions true, then I think his theory will loose much of its explanatory power. And the reasons are related to Quine's famous renate/cordate example that shows that if you define meaning extentionally, then it becomes too coarse-grained for many concepts as we normally understand them.
You wrote:
A better account of the law of non-contradiction is "contradictory statements cannot both be true in the same sense at the same time". The in the same sense part is avoided if the truth qualified according to a particular interpretation. So if under one interpretation "X" is true and if under another interpretation "X" is false, they're not true in the same sense, and so there is no contradiction.
We were not discussing the truth conditions of an interpretation of "X". — creativesoul
Here's one argument against the view the truth is a relation from the top of my head (I think it originated from either Russell or Wittgenstein).On my view truth is a relationship. Correspondence theorists typically posit truth as a quality/property of true statements/assertions/propositions. — creativesoul
There are no such things as different interpretations in the same sense. — creativesoul
If the truth or falsity of "X" is dependent upon interpretation, and there are three different interpretations of "X", all of which conflict with one another, then it would follow that "X" can be both true and false at the same time.
"X" cannot be both, true and false, at the same time.
Thus, it is not the case that the truth or falsity of "X" is dependent upon interpretation.
QED.
The idea behind truth-makers is to give a metaphysical explanation of truth in terms of entities which are language-independent (or mind independent more generally). But if you appeal to facts or states of affairs instead, then they are too much like propositions (because how do you individuate facts/states of affairs if not by the propositions describing them? - it seems that understanding what facts/states of affairs are already presupposes the understanding of propositions), and that threatens to make the correspondence theory vacuous (because why do we need to talk about correspondence at all, if all we need is to analyze propositions in order to understand what makes them true? -- the later was, incidentally, Wittgenstein's view, both early and late, at least on my understanding of his philosophy).I hold that different true statements can most certainly be made about the same facts/events/happenings/states of affairs/etc. I wouldn't however call those "entities". The "truth-maker" notion falls flat on my view as well, for it isolates one necessary element for truth and calls it a truth-maker. That would be akin to calling apples "apple pie-makers". It takes more. — creativesoul
If that were true, then the statement would be both true and false at the same time, depending upon the interpretation — creativesoul
You wrote:
Here's on argument against the view the truth is a relation from the top of my head (I think it originated from either Russell or Wittgenstein).
Consider the two propositions "A loves B" and "B loves A". Clearly they mean different things and therefore they are true under different condition (regrettably, the one can be true without the other). Now, if there's anything they are related to it must be A, the relation Love and B. However, this by itself cannot explain the difference between the two propositions, since they are related to precisely the same entities, so under the relational theory they must be the same proposition (but they aren't), so the theory cannot explain why they differ in their truth conditions.
There's no contradiction because you can make different statements by using the same words (consider indexicals such as "I" "here" etc.).If the truth of a statement were dependent upon interpretation, then all statements would have precisely the same truth conditions as all of the interpretations thereof. — creativesoul
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