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On 3/18/2024 11:33 AM, Ross Finlayson wrote:I think what you got there is usually calledOn 03/18/2024 03:30 AM, Mikko wrote:>On 2021-03-27 14:54:31 +0000, olcott said:>
>Most people construe the term "absolute truth" as necessarily coming>
from the mind of God, thus atheists reject absolute truth. Philosophy
leaves religion out of it and says that analytical truth can be
verified on the basis of its meaning.
>
Because Quine had such a hard time understanding that bachelors are
unmarried in his "Two Dogmas of Empiricism" I have adapted the
definition of analytical truth so that it can be more directly divided
from other forms of truth:
It is a sin to say anything untrue about other people.
>(1) Expressions of language that are defined to be true and>
Truth is not a matter of definition.
>(2) Expressions of language that have been derived on the basis of>
applying truth preserving operations.
Only affirmative sentences and only if derived from true sentences.
>
Note that the word "sentence" has different meanings in comp.thery
and sci.lang. In the former (and in sci.logic) it usually excludes
all but affirmative sentences.
>
Nah, an idea of "absolute truth" can arrive from simply
considering a theory where there's a language that only
has truisms, a "Comenius language",
In other words only semantic tautologies that are self-evidently true
are included.
>
In epistemology (theory of knowledge), a self-evident proposition is a
proposition that is known to be true by understanding its meaning
without proof... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-evidence
>then it results thatI don't know what you mean by: "the Russell set"
the Russell set is the same as the Liar sentence,
>then that's only a prototype of a first fallacy orThings such as {cats are animals} are stipulated to be true thus
contradiction, then that it provides both all the
cases for forward inference and a case for deductive
inference, at once, together.
>
can be used as premises to deductive inference such that the
conclusion is defined to be a necessary consequence of its premises.
This eliminates things such as the principle of explosion.
>So, the "metaphysics", of such a thing, and "true theory">
or "a theory of truth", has that it's purely a matter of
reason, then insofar as that both deists and non-deists
"we have a metaphysic, and, deism is super-scientific",
to exclude deism from scientism, while still making it
so that formally both deism and non-deism are irrelevant,
in "a least metaphysics", in a sort of Hegelian approach
and Aristotle would approve, as a Plato's ideal and for
Kant only the sublime Ding-an-Sich, only that much greater
and within itself, this way there can certainly be a theory,
at all, "A Theory", then not so much that we can know it,
but we can ascertain it and attain to it, and it is,
and it's true.
>
>
I sort of get into this in my podcasts under "Philosophical
Foreground" and some 10,000's posts on sci.logic and so on.
>
https youtube /@rossfinlayson
>
>
If this is an introduction to, "sci.lang", here the
notion is of "a Comenius language", which is a universe
of objects of the theory of language, all true, ...,
Yes this seems to be what I am meaning.
>then according to comprehension, one excluded, ...,>
"elementary primitives of ur-language",
for a course of axiomless natural deduction.
>
Alternatively every sentence could be construed as an axiom.
Or more simply that a set of necessary consequences are derived
from stipulated truths. The latter essentially taking on the
role of an axiom.
>>>
About the affirmative and negative, negatory, one idea
to consider is that the language actually starts with
all negatory, that just results a structure for affirmatory.
>
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When I study English grammar I consider Curme,
and when I diagram its structure it's after Tesniere,
according to the most published book as for a literary
and deconstructive account for its technical content,
or the logico-philosophical, it basically establishes
a space from nothing then also introduces that in
the beginning that there was a word, for the
synthetic/analytic distinction, as a usual holistic
monism, a usual holistic dual monism, and that
technically there's a way to relate that to there
being a teleology and ontology not either void the other.
>
That's the point of my most recent podcasts,
re-connecting teleology and ontology, while
the idea of "a Comenius language a universe of
words", or statement, is about any old "A Theory",
at all, with regards to "truth" and "true".
>
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Doesn't say what it is - just says that it is.
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