Good shit testing requires accurate close reading. This is how you come up with genuine counterexamples. — fdrake
That wasn't reframing. We were talking about why a monist might insist on a logic for all cases when it's not clear what that logic would be. — frank
(I suppose you might have meant, "Testing an idea to see if it is shit," except that that is much too far away from the quibbling that I complained of.) — Leontiskos
Someone who was familiar with that, eg Srap Tasmaner, will have seen the highlighted great circle, said something like "goddamnit, yeah", and understood that the intention of presenting the image in the context of your reference to Euclid was to reference only the circle on its surface, since they will have had the understanding that the surface of a sphere has nothing like a working concept of a "planar figure" in it at all. — fdrake
will have had the understanding that the surface of a sphere has nothing like a working concept of a "planar figure" applicable to it at all. — fdrake
Maybe he would have wished he could resurrect correspondence, but he knew he hadn't. — frank
I kind of thought of Tarski's paper, that I still struggle with reading, was basically a correspondence theory of truth? — Moliere
Either way, what I'm hoping to convey is that logical theories like Russell's are attempting to accommodate any metaphysics of truth -- else it would be begging the question on truth. — Moliere
It doesn't model correspondence theory
Either way, what I'm hoping to convey is that logical theories like Russell's are attempting to accommodate any metaphysics of truth -- else it would be begging the question on truth.
It's faith. — frank
Well, if we follow the evidence it suggest that self-reference isn't a reliable source of truth, in the sense the system breaks down per Russell and Godel — Cheshire
If you have university access you can read Susan Haack's article, which lays out explicitly how we know Tarski did not see himself as offering any definition for truth in natural languages. Just Google Haack on Tarski.
Yeah, as I mentioned, I recall reading somewhere where he says truth in natural language was "meaningless," — Count Timothy von Icarus
So, STT is originally/intended to be deflationary I guess, which jives with how it is often used. — Count Timothy von Icarus
The problem has always been the assumption of a foundation instead of lateral corroboration. It's like doing a puzzle, but taking all the pieces apart to put a new one in. We don't really confirm things against everything that's come before in a linear process. — Cheshire
That isn't strictly speaking true, it's just that the generalisation of the concept of planar figure which applies to circles is so vast it doesn't resemble Euclid's one at all. You can associate planes with infinitely small regions of the sphere - the tangent plane just touching the sphere surface at a point. And your proofs about sphere properties can include vanishingly small planar figures so long as they're confined to the same vanishingly small region around a point. — fdrake
What I was calling shit testing is the process of finding good counterexamples. And a good counterexample derives from a thorough understanding of a theory. It can sharpen your understanding of a theory by demarcating its content - like the great circle counterexample serves to distinguish Euclid's theory of circles from generic circles. — fdrake
Yes
Here I am using it, no? Its use-case is philosophical, rather than pragmatic, but I don't think that makes it meaningless. — Moliere
To use ↪Srap Tasmaner 's division, this example is in (1). A child can understand the sentence. — Moliere
"Duck is false" and "2+3+4+5 is false" don't work because "Duck" and "2+3+4+5" are not assertions at all, but nouns. — Moliere
The pronoun in "This sentence is false" points to itself, which is a statement. — Moliere
"This sentence is false" — Moliere
We seem to think about mathematics very differently. You think that a point can be deleted; that a set of coplanar points might not lie on a plane, etc. Those strike me as the more crucial disagreements. — Leontiskos
At the heart of this thread seems to be the question of whether we can actually say that someone is wrong. — Leontiskos
our notion of "correctly assertible" seems to be something like a subjective consistency condition, in the sense that it only examines whether someone is subjectively consistent with their own views and intentions. — Leontiskos
Okay, but I still don't understand why you are calling this "shit testing." Why does it have that name? It sounds like you want to give counterexamples that highlight subjective inconsistencies. Fine, but why is it called "shit testing?" — Leontiskos
I don't know what to tell you other than you learn that stuff in final year highschool or first year university maths. If you're not willing to take that you can do those things for granted I don't know if we're even talking about maths.
Maybe we're talking about Leontiskos-maths, a new system. How does this one work? :P — fdrake
Of course you can. If someone tells you that modus ponens doesn't work in propositional logic, they're wrong. — fdrake
More normative. It's not correct to assert that modus ponens fails in propositional logic because how propositional logic works has been established. — fdrake
they're norms of comprehension, and intimately tied up with what it means to correctly understand those objects. — fdrake
Someone who was familiar with the weirdness of sphere surfaces, eg Srap Tasmaner, will have seen the highlighted great circle, said something like "goddamnit, yeah" — fdrake
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