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Single Idea 18901

[filed under theme 3. Truth / B. Truthmakers / 5. What Makes Truths / a. What makes truths ]

Full Idea

A fact is an existential characteristic 'of' the domain; it is not something 'in' the domain. To search for truth-making facts in the world is indeed futile.

Gist of Idea

Truthmakers are facts 'of' a domain, not something 'in' the domain

Source

Fred Sommers (Intellectual Autobiography [2005], 'Existence')

Book Ref

'The Old New Logic', ed/tr. Oderberg,David S. [MIT 2005], p.19


A Reaction

Attacking Austin on truth. Helpful. It is hard to see how a physical object has a mysterious power to 'make' a truth. No energy-transfer seems involved in the making. Animals think true thoughts; I suspect that concerns their mental maps of the world.

Related Ideas

Idea 10835 True sentences says the appropriate descriptive thing on the appropriate demonstrative occasion [Austin,JL]

Idea 18902 Correspondence theories can't tell you what truths correspond to [Davidson]


The 10 ideas from Fred Sommers

'Predicable' terms come in charged pairs, with one the negation of the other [Sommers, by Engelbretsen]
Sommers promotes the old idea that negation basically refers to terms [Sommers, by Engelbretsen]
Translating into quantificational idiom offers no clues as to how ordinary thinkers reason [Sommers]
Predicates form a hierarchy, from the most general, down to names at the bottom [Sommers]
Truthmakers are facts 'of' a domain, not something 'in' the domain [Sommers]
Logic which maps ordinary reasoning must be transparent, and free of variables [Sommers]
Unfortunately for realists, modern logic cannot say that some fact exists [Sommers]
In standard logic, names are the only way to refer [Sommers]
Predicate logic has to spell out that its identity relation '=' is an equivalent relation [Sommers]
Categories can't overlap; they are either disjoint, or inclusive [Sommers, by Westerhoff]