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Full Idea
A sentence's truth conditions comprise an exhaustive list of the situations in which that sentence would be true.
Gist of Idea
A sentence's truth conditions are all the situations where it would be true
Source
Tim Button (The Limits of Reason [2013], 03.4)
Book Ref
Button,Tim: 'The Limits of Realism' [OUP 2013], p.23
A Reaction
So to know its meaning you must know those conditions? Compare 'my cat is licking my finger' with 'dramatic events are happening in Ethiopia'. It should take an awful long time to grasp the second sentence.
18692 | Realists believe in independent objects, correspondence, and fallibility of all theories [Button] |
18693 | Indeterminacy arguments say if a theory can be made true, it has multiple versions [Button] |
18694 | Permutation Theorem: any theory with a decent model has lots of models [Button] |
18695 | An ideal theory can't be wholly false, because its consistency implies a true model [Button] |
18696 | The vagueness of truthmaker claims makes it easier to run anti-realist arguments [Button] |
18697 | A sentence's truth conditions are all the situations where it would be true [Button] |
18698 | Predictions give the 'content' of theories, which can then be 'equivalent' or 'adequate' [Button] |
18700 | Cartesian scepticism doubts what is true; Kantian scepticism doubts that it is sayable [Button] |
18701 | The coherence theory says truth is coherence of thoughts, and not about objects [Button] |