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Old 12-30-2002, 11:36 AM   #121
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Talking Re: Re: Nothing new under the sun...

Quote:
Originally posted by Bill Snedden
The point is, whether one thing or many things, something(s) exist(s) and always has/have...
No; the point is that your argument is a re-hashing of Parmenides, doesn't avoid the contingency of language (and hence the antifoundationalist critique...) and doesn't address the principal difficulties associated with the correspondence theory of
truth.
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Old 12-30-2002, 12:55 PM   #122
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Angry No....

Quote:
Originally posted by Hugo Holbling
No; the point is that your argument is a re-hashing of Parmenides, doesn't avoid the contingency of language (and hence the antifoundationalist critique...) and doesn't address the principal difficulties associated with the correspondence theory of
truth.
:banghead: ...the point is that my argument has nothing whatever to do with Parmenides monism or "theories" of truth. While there are both epistemological and ontological ramifications inherent in the language I'm using, I don't believe that anything I'm saying depends upon accepting any particular type of metaphysical viewpoint. My argument is dealing with existential facts and whether or not they exist.

I've been saying all along that contingency of language is not an issue here. Regardless of what language we use or the epistemic problems inherent in language (IOW, regardless of our ability to know or define), can we say that it is a fact that something exists?

It is nothing more or less than the claim that some actual state of affairs is instantiated in reality regardless of our ability to know or describe it. It seems to me that any attempt to argue against propositions of this nature would be necessarily self-contradictory (since it amounts to a denial of one's own existence).

Perhaps it would help if we stopped using the word "true" and spoke only of "fact?" Would it make more sense to anyone if the OP were re-worded "Do facts exist?"

Regards,

Bill Snedden
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Old 12-30-2002, 02:56 PM   #123
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Wink Yes...

Quote:
Originally posted by Bill Snedden
Perhaps it would help if we stopped using the word "true" and spoke only of "fact?" Would it make more sense to anyone if the OP were re-worded "Do facts exist?"
No. Take a look at the comment from Rorty which i posted above:

Quote:
To say that the truth is not out there is simply to say that where there are no sentences there is no truth, that sentences are elements of human languages and that human languages are human creations. Truth cannot be out there- cannot exist independently of the human mind- because sentences cannot so exist, or be out there. The world is out there, but descriptions of the world are not. Only descriptions of the world can be true or false. The world on its own, unaided by the describing activities of human beings cannot....If one clings to the notion of self-subsistent facts, it is easy to start capitalizing the word truth and treating it as something as either identical to God or God's project. Then one will say for example that Truth is great and will prevail.
Your argument gets you no further than "the world is out there". Perhaps a little less banging of heads and a little more homework is called for?
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Old 12-30-2002, 06:16 PM   #124
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Default Like I said, No....

Quote:
Originally posted by Hugo Holbling
No. Take a look at the comment from Rorty which i posted above:
I see almost nothing in there with which I am prepared to disagree, but it is irrelevant to the question I'm asking...

Quote:
Originally posted by Hugo Holbling
Your argument gets you no further than "the world is out there". Perhaps a little less banging of heads and a little more homework is called for?
What homework?!? "The world is out there" is absolutely all that I'm talking about!!!!!

Can this question (is the world out there?) be answered "yes" or "no"? If either, then my point is made.

I honestly feel that both you and John are reading way too much into this issue. Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar.......

Regards,

Bill Snedden

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Old 12-30-2002, 08:23 PM   #125
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Default Sausages for Dinner Again

Quote:
Originally posted by Keith Russell
'Absolute truth' is not the same as 'total, complete truth'.
Jolly good!
Quote:
Originally posted by Keith Russell
I am absolutely sure that I exist, I am sure of my name, and that two + two = four.
I am not sure what "I" am or what it means to exist, I can remember my name but that is an arbitrary label and of no other significance,2+2 does not equal four in binary.

Cheers, John
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Old 12-30-2002, 08:44 PM   #126
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Default Lies, all lies

Quote:
Originally posted by Bill Snedden
At some point in this discussion, I offered my definition of "absolute truth" as "necessarily true; incapable of being denied without contradiction." There are no space/time domain restrictions on my definition. If it were to be true that a lepton existed for even the tiniest fraction of a second, it would be absolutely true that that lepton did exist for that period of time.

That's essentially what I meant when I indicated that I saw little difference between your "existential fact" and what I was defining as "absolute truth". We seem to agree that existential facts simply are; independent of our ability to know them.
Hold it right there! Unknown (existential) facts cannot count of truths of any sort. A truth is a product of a mind and therefore does not exist if the mind (in question) cannot know it!!
Quote:
Originally posted by Bill Snedden

If this is true, then, epistemic confusion aside (), you and I (and possibly Thomas Ash) may not be so far apart.
What epistemic confusion?
Quote:
Originally posted by Bill Snedden

At any rate, let me attempt to engage your definition head-on. How could it not be absolutely true (using your definition) that something exists?

P1) "Absolute truth" is defined as a single truth that has unlimited domain in time or space.

P2) "Nothing," properly understood, is the complete absence of everything. That means time & space, and even the potential for anything. The phrase, "ex nihil, nihil fit" is apt.

P3) If it were to have been the case at any point that "nothing" were to have been in existence, then nothing would or could exist.

C1) Therefore, "nothing", as a putative state of affairs, is impossible.

P4) Something exists now. Even if we concede epistemic difficulties in knowing or defining what it is, we must concede that there is an it.

C2) Therefore, something has always existed. Call it "the universe", or just simply call it "existence", but its existence is eternal & infinite.

C3) Therefore, something exists is a truth that is true without domain in time or space and thus an absolute truth.

I realize that its pretty rough, but I'm sure that you get the gist of it.

Of course, I don't expect you to agree, but seeing your objections would help me to understand exactly what it is that you're saying.
You seem to have defined "something" as "something that must exist" and "nothing" as "something that doesn't exist". With these assumptions it is hardly surprising that you conclude "something exists".

Furthermore, I cannot see any clues as to how one might go about proving your assertions as absolutely true over time and space. I think it quite conceivable that "nothing", defined by you as the "complete absence of everything" might exist in certain parts of the universe - although it may be beyond our ability to know it.

In the case that we were able to agree otherwise, we would still have arrived at an intersubjective truth (i.e. non-absolute). So, I can cave and agree that under our commonly held understandings of "something" and "exist" that something exists, however, our thinking so does not make it so.

Cheers, John
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Old 12-30-2002, 08:59 PM   #127
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Default Tautologies are not absolute truths!!

Quote:
Originally posted by Bill Snedden
....My argument is dealing with existential facts and whether or not they exist....
Perhaps to human minds they do, but then again so do delusions.
Quote:
Originally posted by Bill Snedden
It is nothing more or less than the claim that some actual state of affairs is instantiated in reality regardless of our ability to know or describe it. It seems to me that any attempt to argue against propositions of this nature would be necessarily self-contradictory (since it amounts to a denial of one's own existence).
Physicists tell us anti-matter exists - go figure. Part of the problem is that we don't know the actual state of affairs in reality. A short while ago, people actually used to think there was a god that had caused them to exist (difficult to believe, I know).
Quote:
Originally posted by Bill Snedden
Perhaps it would help if we stopped using the word "true" and spoke only of "fact?" Would it make more sense to anyone if the OP were re-worded "Do facts exist?"
No. How does a fact come into being? How can we have different versions of the same facts? What, therefore, is a fact beyond a well researched observation? Observations are subjective etc.

Cheers, John
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Old 12-31-2002, 05:10 AM   #128
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Arrow Rorty

John, I think Rorty in the passage you quoted is getting caught up in claims about truth and human perceptions of truth. He's attacking something no one on this thread is claiming:

Quote:
To say that the truth is not out there is simply to say that where there are no sentences there is no truth, that sentences are elements of human languages and that human languages are human creations. Truth cannot be out there- cannot exist independently of the human mind- because sentences cannot so exist, or be out there.
What I'm saying (and I think what Bill is saying, though I can't speak for him of course) is about the existence of external reality, which you acceped a few posts back. For a second, ignore humans and human perceptions of truth (and therefore sentences.) Now we're just talking about "unknown (existential) facts", a you phrased it. All I'm claiming when I say absolute truth exists is that there are certain existential facts, regardless of whether they're known or not.
Quote:
The world is out there, but descriptions of the world are not.
See, Rorty says this himself ! He's just asserted a fact and a truth, so there must be some things which are true 'out there' in the realm of external reality and facts, regardless of our ability to know them.
Quote:
Only descriptions of the world can be true or false. The world on its own, unaided by the describing activities of human beings cannot....If one clings to the notion of self-subsistent facts, it is easy to start capitalizing the word truth and treating it as something as either identical to God or God's project. Then one will say for example that Truth is great and will prevail.
Well, this is heading into postmodernist territory, with Rorty talking about how truth (and its only postmodernists who claim anyone ever capitalizes truth - I certainly necer have) is only a human-creating thing. But if he accepts that certain descriptions of the world (eg. 'there is a squirrel on my tree') can be true or false, then I don't see how he doesn't accept absolute truth as defined by the people who advocate it, not its critics.
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Old 12-31-2002, 07:15 AM   #129
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Smile Let's be patient with one another...

Quote:
Originally posted by Bill Snedden
I see almost nothing in there with which I am prepared to disagree, but it is irrelevant to the question I'm asking...
Not so. The antifoundationalist project in epistemology is decidedly relevant to any questioning of facts or truth.

Quote:
What homework?!?
A myriad of thinkers are involved in said project. Perhaps they have deluded themselves where you see clearly, but surely it couldn't hurt to hit the books for a time and learn to understand their critiques?

Quote:
Can this question (is the world out there?) be answered "yes" or "no"? If either, then my point is made.
And what if i can't be answered? Please indulge me by taking another look at that quote; maybe replacing "truth" with "fact" will help you appreciate what Rorty and i are saying. The world does not split itself into facts and truths; our descriptions of it are our own.

I've sent you a PM.
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Old 12-31-2002, 07:29 AM   #130
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Default John or Hugo - we're both fair game!

Quote:
Originally posted by Thomas Ash
John, I think Rorty in the passage you quoted is...
Since it was i who quoted said passage, Thomas, will you permit me to answer?

Too late!

Quote:
All I'm claiming when I say absolute truth exists is that there are certain existential facts, regardless of whether they're known or not.
But as i said to Bill, the world does not oblige you by splitting itself into facts and truths that lay in wait for brave epistemologists, such as yourself. It is we that give birth to such creatures.

Quote:
See, Rorty says this himself ! He's just asserted a fact and a truth
I somewhat suspected this interpretation. Rorty has done no such thing (which would be plain if anyone here had actually read him, or proposed to make the effort); take a look at some of the essays available online, or else try his books. Even a charitable viewing of your conclusion couldn't avoid the "fact" that Rorty gives his opinion of facts and truth only a few sentences later.

Quote:
and its only postmodernists who claim anyone ever capitalizes truth - I certainly necer have
Sometimes i wonder if only postmodernists have a sense of humour...

Quote:
But if he accepts that certain descriptions of the world (eg. 'there is a squirrel on my tree') can be true or false, then I don't see how he doesn't accept absolute truth as defined by the people who advocate it, not its critics.
Rorty is a pragmatist; ergo, he is using a different truth than you, following his own criticisms and those of the long list i have given previously. Please think about what pragmatists mean by truth before operating anyone's petard.
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