I don’t know what you mean.
Rain exists or it doesn’t. — Michael
And if it does, then the world (or region) satisfies the sentence in question. If not, not. — bongo fury
If by this you mean that the sentence “it is raining” is true if and only if the rain exists then that is exactly what I have been saying. — Michael
So when a person says, "It's raining." they may mean that things have gotten worse.
You need a theory of meaning that covers this kind of speech. What do you propose? — frank
But none of this is relevant to what I’m claiming, which is that being true and being false are properties of sentences, not properties of rain (and that there is no Platonic third thing that “sits” between the two) — Michael
Sentences are also abstract objects. — frank
Are they mind-independent abstract objects? I don’t believe in any such things. — Michael
Truth and falsity are properties of sentences, sentences are features of language, and language is a social (and psychological) activity performed by and between people. — Michael
So if there are no people there is nothing which has the property of being either true or false. — Michael
Ok. This is truth skepticism. That's just what it's called. — frank
Five different forms of truth skepticism are examined and defused: (1) the view that truth is indefinable, (2) that it is unattainable and unknowable, (3) that it is inextricably metaphysical and hence not scientifically respectable, (4) that there is no such thing as truth, and (5) that truth is inherently paradoxical, and so must either be abandoned or revised.
Right, so as you're looking for your sunglasses, you are, in a sense, looking for a truth (whatever your truthbearer is). — frank
You have expectations, hypotheses, speculations, etc. You don't know which, if any of them is true, but you believe there is some truth regarding the matter. — frank
Likewise, if you're a realist, you have confidence that the pre-human world was full of events, all of which are describable in principle. Just as you have confidence that there is some true statement about some unknown detail of Pluto, you believe there are all sorts of true statements about worlds where humans do not exist. — frank
but knowable truths is essential to realism. — frank
Fitch’s paradox of knowability ... concerns any theory committed to the thesis that all truths are knowable. Historical examples of such theories arguably include Michael Dummett’s semantic antirealism ..., mathematical constructivism ..., Hilary Putnam’s internal realism ..., Charles Sanders Peirce’s pragmatic theory of truth ..., logical positivism ..., Kant’s transcendental idealism ..., and George Berkeley’s idealism.
...
The realist believes that it is possible for truth to be unknowable in principle.
10 million years ago, it was true that some dinosaurs had feathers. — frank
You can say it however you like, but my language community agrees that it's fine to say
10 million years ago it was true that some dinosaurs had feathers. — frank
And it's also fine to say "I don't know nothing" when claiming ignorance, even though a literal interpretation of the sentence means the opposite.
So you're more than welcome to talk about there having been truth-bearers 10 million years ago, but that's just a case of fictionalism. The truth (pun intended) is that truth-bearers didn't exist 10 million years ago (but dinosaurs did), and it is only the sentences we use now (about the past) that are either true or false. — Michael
I agree. — frank
Ask any scientist. — frank
Truth is (only) a property of truth-bearers.
Truth-bearers did not exist 65 million years ago.
Therefore, truth was not a property of anything that existed 65 million years ago. — Michael
So this is my question: when someone says "The truth of the matter is unknown." What does that mean? Where is the truthbearer? — frank
That depends on what they're talking about. If they're talking about the existence of aliens then either they're saying that the truth of the sentence "aliens exist" is unknown or they're saying that the existence of aliens is unknown. — Michael
They're talking about why Yoon Park disappeared. There's some truth regarding this, but we don't know what it is. Where's the truthbearer? — frank
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.