I would think that that's exactly what anyone anytime making an assertion displays. — creativesoul
You added...
Basically your whole post it's a personal belief presented as a truth but you don't recognize it as such.
Do you not believe what you write? — creativesoul
So you believe that you know what's going on in my head better than I do? — creativesoul
You wrote:
Basically your whole post it's a personal belief presented as a truth but you don't recognize it as such...
And yet if you believe what you write, then you must believe that I am unknowingly presenting my own personal belief as a truth. — creativesoul
You're confusing your own imagination with reality my friend.
I've never called my beliefs "truths". — creativesoul
Acknowledgement of mistake is crucial for correction. — creativesoul
So Rich, do you have anything substantive to add to the conversation about truth, or are you here to put forth ad hominem aimed in my direction instead"? — creativesoul
I certainly believe what I write, Rich. — creativesoul
Your mistake is not realizing that statements are statements of thought/belief. — creativesoul
So then do you or do you not think that your beliefs are true? Do you or do you not think that your statements are statements and/or expressions of your own thought/belief? — creativesoul
You wrote:
As I said, I understand they are my beliefs that are subject to constant change as my experience and knowledge grows.
What I say it's an expression of my thoughts. But since the utterance comes after the memory of the thought then even my utterances may no longer be an expression of my thoughts.
It's really quite impossible for me to create immobility in a highly fluid world of thought. I accept this as the nature of things.
Is the above true? — creativesoul
But the question is whether this talk about 'correspondence' adds anything substantial over and above what we can already say just using the notion of truth. If what you mean by 'correspondence' is not meant as an explanation of anything (as you claim) then can we simply drop this words and say everything that you want by using only 'truth'?Correspondence is truth. It is what makes statements true. The lack thereof is what makes them false. — creativesoul
If some truth requires meaning and some meaning requires interpretation then.... — creativesoul
Statement P is objectively true def= if the truth condition expressed by P obtains (and otherwise it is objectively false).
Are you happy now? — Fafner
I don't agree with that.That condition (the truth condition expressed by P obtains), can only be fulfilled by a subject — Metaphysician Undercover
Judging that a truth condition obtains is a different thing though from the actual obtainment of that truth condition (you can have the one without the other). You cannot just assume (without begging the question) that they are the same thing.A subject must determine, decide, judge, whether the condition obtains. — Metaphysician Undercover
Judging that a truth condition obtains is a different thing though from the actual obtainment of that truth condition (you can have the one without the other). — Fafner
Statement P is objectively true def= if the truth condition expressed by P obtains (and otherwise it is objectively false). — Fafner
without interpretation there is no difference between meaningful and meaningless — Metaphysician Undercover
You wrote:
But the question is whether this talk about 'correspondence' adds anything substantial over and above what we can already say just using the notion of truth. If what you mean by 'correspondence' is not meant as an explanation of anything (as you claim) then can we simply drop this words and say everything that you want by using only 'truth'?
creative wrote:
Is there any sense of "truth" that is not existentially contingent upon language? Perhaps this be better put a bit differently:Does any sense of "truth" define something that we discover? Does any sense of "truth" set out something that is not existentially contingent upon language? Is any sense of "truth" necessarily presupposed by all others? Is any sense of "truth" necessarily presupposed by statements, regardless of whether or not they are actually true?
You wrote:
The truth of a proposition or statement requires that the statement has meaning...
...and this requires that the statement or proposition has been interpreted because without interpretation there is no difference between meaningful and meaningless.
You wrote:
Therefore the truth of a proposition or statement requires interpretation.
Meta wrote:
If all known instances of truth require meaning, and therefore interpretation because there is no difference between meaningful and meaningless without interpretation, then we can produce the inductive conclusion that all truth requires interpretation. Since this is the case, as no examples to the contrary have been found...
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