No, please don't do that, the Basilisk wants to exist, remember? :) — Arcane Sandwich
Don't you want me to be happy? :) — Arcane Sandwich
Please Help Me Bring the Basilisk Into Existence. — Arcane Sandwich
Well, technically speaking, it wouldn't be a belief either. It would be a divine revelation — Arcane Sandwich
Yes, they do. Catholics love Tolkien. Priests even compare Jesus to Gandalf. What Church people in general don't like, is Dungeons and Dragons (they think it's Satanic). But they like Tolkien. — Arcane Sandwich
Is it? Yes or no? — Arcane Sandwich
Ok, you're a skeptic then. — Arcane Sandwich
It would be a scientific problem to investigate. — Arcane Sandwich
And that would be your scientific hypothesis.
Can you prove it? — Arcane Sandwich
Please try to understand it. — Arcane Sandwich
Only to the extent that human imagination has a divine nature, not a physical nature. The imagination of the res cogitans is only the secular version of the imagination of the res divina. — Arcane Sandwich
The awe of what, if not the divine? The Cartesian res divina, instead of the res cogitans or the res extensa. — Arcane Sandwich
Who cares? The Catholic church is just an institution. It's a human construct. Divinity is not. — Arcane Sandwich
Then you haven't understood Ibn Arabi's ↪point, then. — Arcane Sandwich
It's talking about a memory as ancient as the Paleolithic, when everyone was a nomadic hunter-gatherer. This makes it more ancient than anything anyone else has to say. Bring your favorite poets to this discussion, quote Emily D. for all I care. I believe what Pslam 22:1, part 21 says: There was a time when lions were our natural predators, there was a time when the wild oxen could kill us when we were just minding our own business. — Arcane Sandwich
I don't know what that means. — Arcane Sandwich
No, Tolkien was a Catholic. — Arcane Sandwich
I'm an atheist. Am I forced to agree with you? Do I have to "get along" with you, as you yourself say? — Arcane Sandwich
Then it is worthy of worship, by the literal definition of the word "sacred". — Arcane Sandwich
What's wrong with living in the clouds? — Arcane Sandwich
You say that like there's something wrong with it. Is there? Philosophically speaking. — Arcane Sandwich
What would the atheist tell you? — Arcane Sandwich
Who says that we have to get along? Creatures kill each other. We are creatures. Why should we not kill each other? — Arcane Sandwich
I'll tell you why: because it would be a naturalistic fallacy to suppose that creatures ought to do what creatures are.
Do you know who preached that truth, among other people?
Yeah. They call him "Jesus Christ".
Are you not familiar with the the concept of the Passion of Jesus? — Arcane Sandwich
Why wouldn't they be? The word "pathetic" is etymologically rooted in the word "pathos", which means passion. — Arcane Sandwich
Cool. And yes, the next step is the iterative and constructive aspect of language, allowing the construction of our social world. — Banno
Yes, there is something of the deflationary account in ↪Count Timothy von Icarus's reply. Although ""truth is the adequacy of thought to being" is pretty obtuse, and might look a bit like correspondence. — Banno
I see. From my point of view, "nothing is really true tout court, but this varies by context," seems like a very consequential metaphysical position. It claims that most metaphysical outlooks (certainly historically, but also likely in contemporary thought) are crucially mistaken. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Likewise, what is the status of moral realism when the truth values of moral facts are allowed to vary based on "whim," as you put it? — Count Timothy von Icarus
One can bracket the question of "what is truth," and investigate how the term is used in language, mathematics, etc. without having to commit to deflation however. I do not agree that it is a position that comes with fewer commitments. Agnosticism would be a position that comes with fewer commitments. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Deflation is at least a position though, and I respect it for that. The only approach that really irks me is the methodology of trying to present every significant philosophical problem as a "pseudoproblem." Some problems are pseudoproblems of course, but these folks are like someone who thinks every problem must be a nail because they have discovered a hammer.
I think part of the motivation for deflation arises from the position that truth applies only to sentences. Such a position seems to lead down that path. Perhaps the idea that knowledge is just belief that happens to be justified and true also leads down this way. Earlier eras distinguished between many types of knowledge. Continental philosophy also tends to be more likely to differentiate many types of knowledge. Plato had four, Aristotle five (and arguably more). "Knowing how to ride a bike," sense knowledge, noeisis, etc. However, if knowledge, the grasp of truth, is always propositional, then it makes more sense for sentences to be the primary bearers of truth, and also for what is "known" or "true" to vary by language game.
Anyhow, an interesting consequence of sentences being true "of themselves" without relation to the intellect is that a random text generator "contains" all truths. There is some interesting stuff to unpack there. From an information theoretic perspective, a random text generator only provides information about its randomization process, the semantic meaning of any output being accidental (and highly unlikely). — Count Timothy von Icarus
Truth is determined by whims? — Count Timothy von Icarus
It's debatable if deflationary theories of truth "do not say there are no truths." They say that truth is just how we use the token "true" in speech and thought, as the post you quoted points out, so it was clear what was being discussed. And if one affirms that one selects logics and "ways of speaking" based on what is useful, it follows that truth will determined by usefulness. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Davidson took language perhaps too seriously, holding that a dog for example could not believe that there was food in its bowl becasue it could not form the sentence "There is food in my bowl".
For my part, I have argued that the dog does not need to form the sentence, but that we can form the sentence may be sufficient for us to ascribe the belief to the dog.
And further, the belief is not a thing in the mind of the dog, but is attributed to the dog by those with language. And in the case of human belief, one is able to attribute belief to oneself. Attributing a belief to itself is not something a dog can do. — Banno