more from this thinker | more from this text
Full Idea
A ground does not merely necessitate its truth. A ground is also what its truth is appropriately about.
Gist of Idea
A ground must be about its truth, and not just necessitate it
Source
Trenton Merricks (Truth and Ontology [2007], 7.II)
Book Ref
Merricks,Trenton: 'Truth and Ontology' [OUP 2007], p.156
Related Idea
Idea 14408 Truthmaker needs truths to be 'about' something, and that is often unclear [Merricks]
10910 | The best account of truth-making is isomorphism [Wittgenstein, by Mulligan/Simons/Smith] |
10847 | Truthmakers are about existential grounding, not about truth [Lewis] |
10911 | Part-whole is the key relation among truth-makers [Mulligan/Simons/Smith] |
18470 | Maybe truth-making is an unanalysable primitive, but we can specify principles for it [Smith,B] |
18351 | Propositions are made true, in virtue of something which explains its truth [Lowe] |
18362 | Examples show that truth-making is just non-symmetric, not asymmetric [David] |
14415 | A ground must be about its truth, and not just necessitate it [Merricks] |
18466 | If truthmaking is classical entailment, then anything whatsoever makes a necessary truth [MacBride] |
17325 | Truth-maker theory can't cope with non-causal dependence [Liggins] |
18877 | Moral realism doesn't seem to entail the existence of any things [Cameron] |
18339 | The truth-making relation can be one-to-one, or many-to-many [Rami] |