Even TGW essentially admits this by allowing that we may have the practical ability to use a word, say "gold", without knowing everything about gold. — Srap Tasmaner
Unless you're an antirealist, as per the OP. — Luke
To suppose otherwise is to believe – nonsensically – that we could somehow acquire or manifest a grasp of what it takes for that statement to be true (or false) while lacking just the kind of knowledge required to decide the issue either way.
I mean, a feeling alone is not adequate justificatory ground for dismissing a widely accepted argument. — creativesoul
What did you just do above? — creativesoul
How is your conviction that one can avoid bringing their own worldview into a discussion — creativesoul
One must be able to provide more than just a suspicion or a feeling that something is not right - say with Fitch's proof. Interestingly enough, this notion of what counts as sufficient reason to believe/justification is what underwrites a verification/falsification paradigm. — creativesoul
So, I'm not sure how reasonable it would be to expect another person to not already have certain core thought/beliefs in place. — creativesoul
Dummett's argument concludes that the principle of bivalence be rejected based upon the notion that we cannot always recognize whether or not a statement is true/false. — creativesoul
I'm fairly certain that this is close to what TGW has been arguing. — creativesoul
and open to being persuaded either way — Srap Tasmaner
My resistance to an argument or an approach is a hurdle it must clear, that's all. — Srap Tasmaner
2. I put it in the same box with the slingshot argument and Gettier cases. They're fascinating, but I am far from alone in feeling that a logical fast one is being pulled. — Srap Tasmaner
1. If you use intuitionist rules of inference and interpret the logical constants along intuitionist lines, you might be okay, as Dummett is, saying "p→~~Kp" but that's not saying "everyone is omniscient." — Srap Tasmaner
I don't find Fitch's persuasive at all. — Srap Tasmaner
Does that rule out talk about the future as our example? — Srap Tasmaner
If there are or are not such possibilities, how would we figure that out? Examples don't seem to be doing the trick. — Srap Tasmaner
whether LW's approach to meaning leads, as it did for Dummett, to some form of anti-realism. — Srap Tasmaner
It still feels like a contingent matter that I don't know this, not that I am unable to. — Srap Tasmaner
Given all that, I'm not sure that our hypothesis makes sense, namely that there is some property of gold we are unable to learn. What would that property be like? If it's a property that has no effect at all on the way we interact with it -- say, it was God's favorite when he was creating the universe -- then obviously it can never make any difference to how we think and talk about gold. If it does show up somehow, however indirectly, why wouldn't we be able to learn this? — Srap Tasmaner
I'm not sure about this. Your hypothesis does seem to beg the question by presupposing that there's an unrecognisable melting temperature. — Michael
I'm saying that the part of the world that has something to do with the meaning of a particular phrase is the part of the world that influences and measures its use. Which then means that the part of the world that has something to do with the meaning of a particular phrase can't be recognition-transcendent. — Michael
So you say. But Dummett's argument is that meaning-as-use doesn't allow for recognition-transcendent truth conditions. The notion that there's a spoken sound here that has some sort of connection to some other thing there isn't one that seems to work with Wittgenstein's account of meaning. The meaning of the phrase "it is raining" isn't to be understood by positing some metaphysical correspondence between utterance and something else, but by understanding its practical use in recognisable situations. — Michael
So it seems that the real issue here is that you disagree more with Wittgenstein's account of meaning than with Dummett's claim that Wittgenstein's account of meaning entails anti-realism. — Michael