I'm happy to go along with it's being valid, with some reservation about what it means to use existential generalisation over a truth statement. That is, it's not clear what <"There is gold in those hills" exists> is saying, beyond that "There is gold in those hills" is an element in the domain under discussion. — Banno
So what do you take it to imply? Where does this lead? — Banno
then those gold deposits exist, as does the state of affairs in the statement. — AmadeusD
If nobody says anything then gold still exists but nothing has the property of being true or false. — Michael
"true" and "false" are just adjectives used to categorize speech and writing and thoughts and beliefs. — Michael
But now you should go on to ask yourself how it is that you are claiming, "(It is true that) gold still exists but nothing has the property of being true or false." — Leontiskos
I do not think it is that complicated. To make use of existential generalisation all one needs is for "there is gold in those hills" to be in the domain. A pretty minimal existential commitment to there being sentences. No need to decide if it exists like a ghost, or like a chair, or like a number.It's just the ordinary sense of "exists": the Earth exists but ghosts don't. — Michael
I do not think it is that complicated. — Banno
Sure. And the English language does exist. So if our domain includes English sentences, the sentence "Gold exists" is a member of that domain.The sentence "gold exists" doesn't exist if the English language doesn't exist. — Michael
Sure. And the English language does exist. So if our domain includes English sentences, the sentence "Gold exists" is a member of that domain.
That's all that the argument can conclude. — Banno
now you realize you shouldn't use that particular word. — frank
But I didn't say "it is true that gold still exists". I said "gold still exists". — Michael
And by that you mean that it is true. — Leontiskos
You've clearly tied yourself in knots. — Leontiskos
It is suspicious that it predicates truth to sentences in it's own domain. — Banno
Hi! If you have a second, you could explain the difference between sentences and propositions for us? — frank
What's suspicious about Tarski? — Michael
And it's not at all clear what it might mean for a sentence to exist. — Banno
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