You wrote:
No, because if it's true under one interpretation and false under another then it isn't both true and false in the same sense. It's true in one sense and false in another.
You wrote:
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).
The former are particulars, which indeed are numerically identical, but the latter are structured propositions, which aren't. — Pierre-Normand
You wrote:
Again, it all depends on what one means by 'correspondence'. If it is not meant as some sort of metaphysical theory that attempts to explain the truth of statements/sentences/propositions, but merely as some sort of truism, then it could be a pretty innocuous thing to say (but then it is not clear what exactly you are gaining philosophically by talking about 'correspondence' in the first place).
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. — Fafner
As my example about the existence of life on Mars shows, you cannot make this inference. — Fafner
The fact that the word 'subject' appears in 'subjective', doesn't license you to treat everything that a subject says as itself subjective. — Fafner
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). — Fafner
The statement is not true in one sense and false in another, because the truth of the statement is not dependent upon all interpretations thereof. — creativesoul
Here, we need to look at more than just the statement, for being true requires more than that. Being true is akin to corresponding to fact/reality. It requires being meaningful. Thus, the statement's truth is contingent upon language as well as it's being meaningful. The statement and it's meaning are both existentially contingent upon language. Thus, the truth of the statement is as well. — creativesoul
The cat is on the mat" is true if and only if the cat is on the mat. — creativesoul
Truth is presupposed within thought/belief. — creativesoul
"I believe" and "is true" are both redundant uses of language. — creativesoul
You wrote:
Being true requires being meaningful. Whether or not the statement is meaningful is contingent on interpretation. Therefore being true is contingent on interpretation.
"a belief is a belief" is meaningless. — creativesoul
That is irrelevant. A=A is utterly meaningless in and of itself. Let A be "a belief — creativesoul
You wrote:
A belief is just a thought about some idea which we feel some personal intensity. Some people feel great intensity about their thoughts and call them truths. It's pretty common by the way. Usually experience tends to modulate such intensity of thoughts.
It seems to me that you're talking about conviction. — creativesoul
what sorts of things can be true and what makes them so. — creativesoul
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