The rules of correct inference. Consistency. Coherency. Validity. — creativesoul
I'm not quite sure what you mean by this.There's a difference between being true/false and being called so. — creativesoul
Someone can say that "X" is true when it is not. Being called "true" does not make something so. — creativesoul
Granted, coherency is usually defined through consistency, but it doesn't show that they are the same thing. It is just a terminological point about common philosophical usage, you are free of course to use "coherency" as equivalent with "consistency".I am quite curious to see an example of a valid conclusion that is either inconsistent or incoherent. Likewise, I am also quite curious to see an example of an invalid conclusion that is either coherent or consistent. — creativesoul
Truth value is not truth. Truth conditions are not truth. The conclusion introduces new terms, and as such it is invalid. — creativesoul
You're conflating being mistaken with being and/or becoming aware of that. — creativesoul
I prefer to deal with the easy cases first...I thought it might be helpful to look at an actual utterance where there is a contrast between two subjects, and then decide whether that contrast turned out to be differences in word usage or something else. — Srap Tasmaner
...a sentence has the truth value "true" simply if it is true (and "false" if false).
You wrote:
Truth is dependent on meaning, and meaning is dependent on interpretation, therefore truth is dependent on interpretation.
But what does it mean for a sentence to have truth conditions? Well it is something that is relative to a language. So in English, the sentence 'cats fly' express one particular set of truth conditions, but it could've been otherwise (if English had a different history, for example if 'cat' meant what 'dog' means in our English, then 'cats fly' would have different truth conditions in that hypothetical English).
So let's imagine a world where 'cats fly' doesn't have any truth conditions, and that would be a world where English doesn't exist, or any other language (suppose that there are no humans in that world). But now, can the sentence 'cats fly' have a truth value in that world? It seems to me that it can. If cats fly in that world, then the sentence is true in that world, and if they don't then it would be false. So here you have a world where a sentence doesn't have truth conditions but has a truth value. So truth values don't depend on truth conditions, and hence they cannot depended on interpretation either — Fafner
You wrote:
Truth is dependent on meaning, and meaning is dependent on interpretation, therefore truth is dependent on interpretation.
That is the original argument you offered. — creativesoul
Being true requires being meaningful. Whether or not the statement is meaningful is contingent on interpretation. Therefore being true is contingent on interpretation. — Metaphysician Undercover
If it was further qualified by saying something like the truth of a statement is contingent upon it's being meaningful, I would agree. — creativesoul
Not all truth is dependent upon meaning. — creativesoul
The underlying issue here is clear. You've neglected to take an account of pre and/or non-linguistic thought/belief. — creativesoul
Try this...
Thought/belief is prior to language.
Some pre-linguistic thought/belief is true.
True thought/belief is existentially contingent upon truth.
Thus, some truth is prior to language. — creativesoul
Hmmmmm....I think the question, still, is whether truth is a semantic notion. — Srap Tasmaner
It is still possible that truth is dependent both on subjects and the objective reality, in which case sentences would be objectively true despite the dependence of this fact itself on subjective interpretation (and in my sense "objectively true" means dependent on the subject-independent reality). — Fafner
In other words, proving that truth depends on subjects is not the same as proving that there's no objective truth. — Fafner
Therefore we define true as "the sentence corresponds with reality", when we really mean that the interpretation of the sentence corresponds with how reality appears to us. That we have interpreted the sentence properly, and that reality appears as it really is, we tend to take for granted because we have confidence, "trust" in our own capacities. This trust, or confidence, is implied within the concept of truth, because without this assumed correspondence between the interpretation and the reality, truth is meaningless. — Metaphysician Undercover
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