gold melting at a certain pt. is also not a matter of convention; — The Great Whatever
hence what's expressed by a sentence claiming that gold can't ever melt isn't true or false as a matter of convention / use either. — The Great Whatever
But here I'd like to slow down. Did you say "what's expressed by a sentence" rather than just "a sentence" for a reason? Is it the sentence that's true or false, or is it what's expressed by the sentence? If it's the latter, what sort of thing is that? — Srap Tasmaner
in the context of antirealism, to say that gold really was found in the hills? — Janus
Allowing truth to attach to sentence tokens allows a cleaner treatment of indexicals -- I think -- but then you have to make truth dependent on a language+interpretation as well as on how the world is, which I take it you're not inclined to do. — Srap Tasmaner
but then you have to make truth dependent on a language+interpretation as well as on how the world is, which I take it you're not inclined to do. — Srap Tasmaner
Obviously simply re-asserting the claim that gold was really found in the hills is no answer at all, — Michael
whether someone says something true is of course dependent on the language, because what someone says is a matter of linguistic convention. but whether this latter thing is so is not — The Great Whatever
the insistence that the conditions under which smth's true must be 'verification-immanent' is simply added for no reason. truth has nothing to do with verification. — The Great Whatever
but that they disagree on what it means to be true. — Michael
"'it is raining' is true" just means "there are rational and/or empirical grounds to justify the assertion 'it is raining'" — Michael
The realist, on the other hand, argues something like the statement "'it is raining' is true" meaning "'it is raining' corresponds to some relevant recognition-transcendent state-of-affairs" — Michael
'"it is raining" is true' does not mean anything more or less than 'it is raining.' — The Great Whatever
You wrote:
That "gold really was found in the hills" has a verification-immanent truth condition, because the meaning of the phrase "gold really was found in the hills" is to be explained by looking at the practical ability to use such a phrase; a practical ability that is to be understood according to the empirical situations that would warrant its assertion.
It doesn't follow from the fact that one knows when asserting "gold really was found in the hills" is warranted that the claim itself is either verifiable or true. — creativesoul
Not meaning to derail the thread, but briefly, do you think it's impossible for philosophy to acquire any kind of method? And if it isn't why don't we establish method in philosophy?this is why philosophy is a joke - it's so lacking in method that 'nuh uh' is always a viable professional option. — The Great Whatever
According to Dummett (as per Wittgenstein), the meaning of the sentence isn't to be understood by appealing to some recognition-transcendent state-of-affairs that the statement corresponds to, but by looking to its practical use. — Michael
Verifiability is tied into the notion of meaning, and so also tied into the notion of truth. — Michael
This is very strange coming from you. You've long argued against this Tarskian approach (e.g. here). — Michael
Not meaning to derail the thread, but briefly, do you think it's impossible for philosophy to acquire any kind of method? And if it isn't why don't we establish method in philosophy? — Agustino
in fact u seem to be committed to saying that for anything to be true, these inguistic conditions have to be set up — The Great Whatever
so according to u, for it to be raining, there have to be assertion conditions & justification & empirical conditions & verifiability & blah blah blah. nope. water just has to be falling from the sky. — The Great Whatever
Understanding what it takes to be verifiable is about us. Being verifiable is about the claim. It makes no sense whatsoever to create a criterion for "verifiably immanent truth conditions" if those conditions can be satisfied by unverifiable false claims.
That needs to be acknowledged. — creativesoul
Well, yes, because truth is predicated of statements. Only statements are the sort of things that can be true, correct? — Michael
And how am I to understand what you mean when you say that water just has to be falling from the sky? — Michael
Any claim you make about the conditions for truth must be understood, and as per Wittgenstein the only way I can understand the claims you make is by understanding the rational and/or empirical occasions that warrant the use of those words. — Michael
How exactly do you expect someone to learn a language if they can't recognise when they should or shouldn't make a particular claim? Language-acquisition would be impossible if recognition-transcendent conditions were part of a word's meaning. — Michael
What does it mean for gold to really have been found in the hills? What do we understand the truth conditions to be? Obviously simply re-asserting the claim that gold was really found in the hills is no answer at all, and it is this kind of non-answer that Dummett takes issue with and tries to examine. A Tarskian answer such as "X" is true if X isn't a sufficient account. — Michael
...it would be impossible to know what "sugar is sweet" means if you didn't understand that putting some sugar in your mouth would be the method to verify the claim.
One can draw mental correlations between the physiological sensory effects/affects of sugar and the statement "sugar is sweet" without any awareness of verification methods. — creativesoul
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