Is there an unknown truth regarding Park? Or not? — frank
1. Truth and falsehood are properties of truth-bearers
2. Truth-bearers are features of language, not mind-independent abstract objects
Which of these do you disagree with? — Michael
There is no deeper metaphysics. We say things, we write things, we sign things. There's no need to overthink this. — Michael
when we say that the sentence "it is raining" is false we are saying that the sentence is false, we're not saying that the rain is false. — Michael
So if there are no people there is nothing which has the property of being either true or false. But assuming that idealism/phenomenalism isn't the case, there is still gold and rain and so on. — Michael
You seem to think that (1) and (2) are true only if some truth-bearer existed 10 million years ago. — Michael
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
:wink:I don't why you're making this so complicated. — frank
2. Truth-bearers are features of language, not mind-independent abstract objects — Michael
We thus find the usual candidate truth-bearers linked in a tight circle: interpreted sentences, the propositions they express, the belief speakers might hold towards them, and the acts of assertion they might perform with them are all connected by providing something meaningful. This makes them reasonable bearers of truth.
At the same time, he wants to be a realist. — frank
Michael's argument talks about the existence of sentences. Hence it make use of quantification in a second-order language - a language about language. In a first-order language we can make the an inference by quantifying over a predication - from f(a) to ∃(x)f(x). In second order logic one might perform a similar operation over a group of predicates. If we have ϕ(f(a)), we can infer ∃Pϕ(P) - if f(a) is ϕ, then something (P, in this case) is ϕ. But at issue here is a choice in how this is to be understood. Is it about just the things (a,b,c...) that make up the domain of the logic, or does it bring something new, P, into the ontology? The first is the substitutional interpretation, the second is the quantificational interpretation. This second interpretation has Platonic overtones, since it seems to invoke the existence of a certain sort of abstract "thing". — Banno
What I'm saying is what I've said above:
1. Truth is a property of truth-bearers, and
2. Truth-bearers are features of language, not mind-independent abstract objects à la Platonism — Michael
Well, its a complex, multifaceted issue. A close approximation might be that being true is something we do with utterances, rather than saying that some utterances are true. It's not the noise or the marks that are true, after all - utterances are only true if a whole lot of other stuff is included. There's a tendency to try to make a messy process much neater, but the mess is perhaps ineliminable. — Banno
Are they mind-independent? Do sentences exist even if language doesn't? — Michael
How can an abstract object have the property of truth? — Michael
How can a sound be "connected" to an abstract object? — Michael
Becasue that's what we do with sentences such as those...How can an abstract object have the property of truth? — Michael
Sometimes we use those sentences as if they set out what is the case, and call them true. Sometimes, we use them to set out what is not the case, and call them false...
It's not so much that one can prove that sentences are the sort of thing that is true or false, as deciding that being true or false is the sort of thing that sentences - statements in particular - are able to do. Or, more accurately, as deciding that statements are the sort of thing we can treat as being true or false. — Banno
is problematic. It seems to imply that the sentence is at the same level as the gold and the hills. It isn't. The sentence is a logical order above the hills and the gold.P2. If the sentence "there is gold in those hills" is true then the sentence "there is gold in those hills" exists. — Michael
They're independent of any particular mind. That's what makes them abstract objects. — frank
In the case of a proposition, it's because it's the meaning of an uttered sentence.
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Sounds and marks are intentionally used to express truth or falsehood. — frank
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