1 2 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 50 Next
Topic: Is Truth Subjective?
Abracadabra's photo
Sun 08/07/11 03:52 PM

Well Creative I'm glad you have it all figured out.laugh laugh laugh laugh

But its all very confusing and I'm not all that convinced that its even important enough to deserve this much attention.

Cheers drinker


What I don't understand is that if he already has it all figure out so passionately, then why did he start a thread entitled "Is Truth Subjective?"

If all he intended to do is argue and belittle everyone's views who suggest that truth might be subjective, then this was a bait thread

He should have just started a thread claiming that he has the absolute correct description of truth and that he will viciously attack any opposing views.

laugh

Because that sure as hell appears to be precisely what he's been doing ever since the thread began.

no photo
Sun 08/07/11 04:17 PM

your statement above was:

1. A verified claim is truth.(primary premiss)

I said that a verified claim is a true claim.

Then you said that a verified claim is true.

So what is the difference?


The difference is that I did not say that a verified claim is a true claim.

I said "A verified claim is called "true". "Called" being the operative word here. A claim is true if, and only if it corresponds to fact/reality.


Yes you did. And I corrected that ovesite.

But you did say that a verified claim is truth.


Abracadabra's photo
Sun 08/07/11 04:26 PM
Creative wrote:

This constitutes fact in evidence that you're not paying attention to what I write, and is yet another example of setting truth out in the wrong way. "Truth value" is not truth. It is a measure of coherency. An argumant can be completely coherent and false. "Truth value" is therefore, not truth. I'm arguing correspondence. I've already addressed the difference many pages back with a bit on Kant, and what constitutes classical philosophy, etc.

I wonder if you even know what the words that you've put to use even mean. This is not a conversation taking place within a casual register. This is philosophy, and it is a discipline. The register is formal. The way you've set things out here leads to nowhere by requiring some sort of omniscient perspective of actual truth, in order for the claim to make sense.


By the way, you should have laid all that out in the OP.

I have no interest in limiting my thoughts on truth to ideas that Kant had on what constitutes classical philosophy.

no photo
Sun 08/07/11 04:42 PM
This is not a conversation taking place within a casual register. This is philosophy, and it is a discipline. The register is formal.


Wow. You expect to actually find "formal" on Mingle? Good luck with that quest.

Have you thought of doing this on a real philosophy forum somewhere?

If you have please share the link. I might be interested in reading some of it.


creativesoul's photo
Sun 08/07/11 04:54 PM
But you did say that a verified claim is truth.


NO, I DID NOT.


ONE MORE TIME...


I was quoting Abra, and setting out the logical error that necessarily follows from the claim that HE made.

Do you understand?

creativesoul's photo
Sun 08/07/11 04:56 PM
I said a verified claim is called "true".

no photo
Sun 08/07/11 05:01 PM

But you did say that a verified claim is truth.


NO, I DID NOT.


ONE MORE TIME...


I was quoting Abra, and setting out the logical error that necessarily follows from the claim that HE made.

Do you understand?


Okay gottcha!:wink:

creativesoul's photo
Sun 08/07/11 05:02 PM
Edited by creativesoul on Sun 08/07/11 05:19 PM
By the way, you should have laid all that out in the OP.

I have no interest in limiting my thoughts on truth to ideas that Kant had on what constitutes classical philosophy.


Another belief based upon false presupposition that shows a lack of understanding. No one in modern philosophy goes back to anywhere but Kant. You ought learn your history as well as you've learned your rhetoric.

creativesoul's photo
Sun 08/07/11 05:11 PM
Edited by creativesoul on Sun 08/07/11 05:14 PM
Just for the record...

When I said "get it right". I meant get my position on truth right before CONTINUING TO CRITICIZE an illusory creation of your own mind WHILE TREATING AND CALLING IT someone else's...


namely mine!


bigsmile

creativesoul's photo
Sun 08/07/11 05:18 PM
I was quoting Abra, and setting out the logical error that necessarily follows from the claim that HE made.


It follows from his argument that children cannot employ/engage truth prior to language because it wrongfully holds that truth is a product of language.

We know better.

Children possess innate and learned knowledge prior to language. Children develop and act uppn belief prior to language acquisition. It leads to clearly absurd conclusions.



creativesoul's photo
Sun 08/07/11 05:32 PM
As I've said before, if you view philosophical arguments as a bad thing. If you believe that logical and reasonable refutation is a bad thing. If you are prone to taking things personally, then may I suggest that my philosophy thread about truth is not for you? huh That is how critical philosophy is done. If you are here to talk about me personally, about what you think about me personally, then TAKE A HIKE, because I'm not interested. Philosophy is all about putting reason and logic to good use. You expect me to not do philosophy in a philosophy forum, and instead just chit-chat?

That is being very unreasonable.

Don'tcha think?

I chit-chat in the other forums. In the philosophy forum, I do philosophy. If the criticism is too much, then just leave. No one is strapping you down and propping your eyes open with toothpicks and forcing you to engage in this dialogue.

That's how critical philosophy is done. It is the same sort of criticism that I apply to my own - as best I can.

no photo
Sun 08/07/11 05:41 PM
The point I'm making is that there are not many philosophers in the formal sense on Mingle2.

If you ask everyone who is not into formal philosophers to take a hike from your forum, you might find yourself alone. :wink:

ArtGurl's photo
Sun 08/07/11 06:56 PM
Edited by ArtGurl on Sun 08/07/11 07:08 PM
laugh OMG Creative ... If I want good quality sushi, I do not travel 1000 miles away from the ocean :tongue:


What ever happened to people just being able to have a conversation on a 'social networking' site? I need an aspirin!

Abracadabra's photo
Sun 08/07/11 07:15 PM

Just for the record...

When I said "get it right". I meant get my position on truth right before CONTINUING TO CRITICIZE an illusory creation of your own mind WHILE TREATING AND CALLING IT someone else's...


namely mine!


bigsmile



What? what

Who criticized your position?

All I did was ask you to give a working example of how it can actually be used in a specific situation to determine a specific truth.

When you failed to be able to produce a specific working example I asked why I should believe that you even have a working definition then.

You're the one who continually criticizes my position as being fatally logically flawed, and a false belief, blah, blah, blah.

As far as I'm concerned you haven't even offered a working example to even criticize if I wanted to.

In fact, I've already shown how your definition is necessarily incomplete as you have stated it, and that you actually demand that there is more to it when you actually reference back to it.

Did you read the following post: (I copy and paste it here for ease of reference:


~~~~~



Creative's Definition of Truth

Truth is correspondence to fact/reality.

Period.


Abra's response to this:

Well, if we accept this, then we have no choice but to recognize that there are indeed different kinds of truth.


Creative's reply:

No.

Truth is correspondence to fact/reality. Thought, belief, and positive claims can correspond, but if there are true, it is because they correspond to fact/reality.


Abra's observations:

Yes, but you haven't gone into that much detail with your definition.

Remember?

You have refused to acknowledge the specific correspondence that you are restricting your definition to.

It appears here that you are allowing though, belief, and positive claims to be things that can qualify as something that corresponds to fact/reality.

Well duh?

What are thoughts?

A description is nothing more than thoughts put into words.

What are beliefs?

A description is nothing more than beliefs put into words.

What are positive claims?

A description is nothing more than positive claims put into words.

So you've already got my definition for analytical truth anyway.

Yet you rant and rave that my definition is illogical. whoa


~~~~~

So even though you refuse to acknowledge the all-important description within your basic definition of truth. You still need to acknowledge that it is indeed paramount for your definition to even work.

You have no choice but to recognize the paramount importance of the analytical descriptions that are required before this definition can be workable and meaningful.

From my perspective you're doing nothing more than exhibiting a profound stubbornness to own up to the fact that I am right about the paramount importance of these analytical descriptions as being required before this concept of truth can even be workable or meaningful.

You're clearly acknowledging their importance outside of your definition, but you're refusing to acknowledge that they are indeed central to the definition itself, that and without them your definition is utterly meaningless and useless.

You have to specific what is is that you are corresponding fact/reality to, if you want truth to be defined as that correspondence.

Otherwise any correspondence will do, and you'd have no choice but to recognize that even my example of Zen Truth would qualify as truth by your definition because I can used any correspondence I choose, since you did not specify what the is being corresponded with fact/reality.

So your definition as it stands, is WIDE OPEN.

You failed to restrict your domain of correspondence.

You are guilty of precisely the thing that so many people fail to pay close attention to; the domain of applicability!

You're definition, as it stands, leaves the nature of the actual correspondence WIDE OPEN!

As you say, you confess yourself, you could be corresponding fact/reality with thought, believe, a claim, a description, or even just an experience that is being corresponded with the state of affairs.

You leave the nature of the correspondence basically UNDEFINED.

So any correspondence will do evidently.

Abracadabra's photo
Sun 08/07/11 07:20 PM

laugh OMG Creative ... If I want good quality sushi, I do not travel 1000 miles away from the ocean :tongue:


What ever happened to people just being able to have a conversation on a 'social networking' site? I need an aspirin!


Creative has made it clear.

This is not a social network.

This is a professionally registered philosophy symposium restricted only to professional philosophers. You must show your Ph.D. at the door before you may enter.

laugh

Hi Artsy, waving flowers

creativesoul's photo
Sun 08/07/11 07:58 PM
For whatever it's worth, I'm refuting falsehoods and using the opportunity to better set things out. This is, afterall, a thread about truth.

...since you are indeed holding it out to be an objective entity or correspondence in its own right.


Two problems here worth mentioning...

1. I have not argued for truth as an objective entity or "correspondence in it's own right". That allegation does not necessarily follow from my claims, nor do my claims necessarily presuppose it. Therefore, we can only conclude that the above directly reflects a false belief stemming from false presuppositions within the mind of the speaker. Logic does not bear it out.

I would guess that that is exactly what projecting false belief out into the world works looks like.

indifferent


--


Moving on...

2. Correspondence doesn't have 'rights', so I have no idea what "correspondence in it's own right" is even supposed to mean. huh It is most certainly NOT what I mean, and since the focus has once again shifted to what constitite being my claims...

We ought at least get it right.

indifferent


--


Truth cannot be completely independent of a thinking/believing subject - nor need it be. <-----that's the important part. It can be both, contingent upon thought/belief for it's engagement/enactment, and not contingent upon thought/belief or language for what it is. Those are not mutually exclusive propositions. Nor does a necessary connection to humans make truth necessarily subject to language.<-----that's another important part. Our understanding of truth is contingent upon our language. Therefore, let's put our language to good use in setting truth out.

It can be and it is the case that children engage in the necessary presupposition of truth/reality correspondence during very early childhood. Behavior bears witness within the facts -as they occur- that children hold certain belief about the way things are. This is the only observational evidence necessary to prove that children presuppose truth/reality correspondence in thought/belief and begin putting it to use long before language acquisition. Thus proving that truth is not contingent upon language for it's existence nor is language necessary for our engagement in truth.


--

Which brings us to the obvious application of this knowledge...

--


If we posit that truth has no meaning and therefore no existence until after language acquisition, then it only follows that children cannot hold belief prior to language acquisition. We have clearly arrived at a contradiction. Children quite clearly engage in behaviors which show that trust and truth are being engaged within their minds long before they have begun to acquire natural language.

Thus given the relevant facts. Given the wealth of knowledge based upon those facts, to reject that children put truth to use prior to language would be a very foolish argument.

This shows us quite clearly that truth cannot be equal to a description, because we see the nonsense that necessarily follows from holding that particular false presupposition in thought/belief. Setting out truth as though it is equal to "truth value" or equal to a true description cannot take current knowledge into account. It cannot explain the thought, belief, and knowledge that we already know children possess. If children can know things, believe things, and act upon those beliefs - then we know that truth is not contingent upon language for it's existence. It only follows that truth cannot be rightfully equated to a lingustic description which necessitates dependency upon language for it's existence. We know that the existence of truth is not dependent upon language.



--



That is exactly what is adequately explained by the necessary presupposition of truth/reality correspondence within thought/belief formation. That necessary presupposition adequately explains why and how children hold false belief, true belief, and possess knowledge prior to language acquisition. It adequately explains the history of human knowledge. It adequately exhausts all of the prior (mis)conceptions of truth. It adequately explains the effectiveness of the doctrines of verifiability and falsifiability.















STOP!!!

















Think about that for a bit, then get back with me. I'm done for the day.

drinker

Make the next one count.

creativesoul's photo
Sun 08/07/11 08:16 PM
If you are here to talk about me personally, about what you think about me personally, then TAKE A HIKE, because I'm not interested.


Just for the record...

That does not tell everyone to take hike. Only those who are engaged in what is indicated.

Abracadabra's photo
Sun 08/07/11 08:51 PM

Think about that for a bit, then get back with me. I'm done for the day.

drinker

Make the next one count.


Why would I bother?

I already have two perfectly good models of truth. On based on the analytical approach, the other based on direct experience, both of them being totally sound and meaningful within their domains of applicability.

You have nothing to add to that.

Apparently you are stuck in the eternal time warp of philosophical paralysis.

"We can't define anything precisely. If we attempt to, we get into that paralysis of thought that comes to philosophers… one saying to the other: "you don't know what you are talking about!". The second one says: "what do you mean by talking? What do you mean by you? What do you mean by know?" - Richard P Feynman :

Evidently that's where you're at. You're stuck in the eternal philosophical paralysis of searching for the "Holy Grail" of "Perfect Analytical Truth".

As far as I'm concerned it doesn't exist. It's a philosophical unicorn.

You clearly don't have it in your hands, because if you did you could give a working example of how to apply it to a specific situation. But you obviously can't do that. So you don't yet have it, you are still on the hunt.

I, on the other hand, have already found it. drinker

The "Holy Grail" of pure philosophical truth is the Zen Truth or spiritual truth, or simply the true of pure existence.

I already have that "Holy Grail" my friend. And clearly Jeanniebean does too. She carries it with her everywhere she goes offering it up to anyone who is brave enough to drink from it.

That is the "Holy Grail" of pure philosophical truth.

At the other end of the spectrum, when it comes to analytical truth, I don't pretend that there exists some analytical unicorn of truth. I simply recognize that analytical truth is a man-made analysis.

And I'm totally content with that. bigsmile

So why would I bother wasting any more of my time reading your circular semantic arguments that will never end?

You'll still be here searching for the "Holy Grail" of analytical truth and life will be OVER. laugh

I have no desire to wallow with you in that kind of fruitless philosophical semantic paralysis.

It's a total waste of time.



oldhippie1952's photo
Sun 08/07/11 09:12 PM
To me it is simply numerous posts about someone's opinions.

Whether their opinions are correct or not cannot be determined. The passionate arguments made about an opinion make it suspect because emotion is involved.

creativesoul's photo
Mon 08/08/11 08:09 AM
< continued at this topic >
< last part of this topic is here >
To me it is simply numerous posts about someone's opinions.

Whether their opinions are correct or not cannot be determined. The passionate arguments made about an opinion make it suspect because emotion is involved.


Why do you say that correct/incorrect opinions cannot be determined?

1 2 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 50 Next