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Single Idea 19136

[filed under theme 3. Truth / F. Semantic Truth / 2. Semantic Truth ]

Full Idea

It is complained that Tarski's definitions do not establish the connection between truth and meaning that many philosophers hold to be essential.

Gist of Idea

Many say that Tarski's definitions fail to connect truth to meaning

Source

Donald Davidson (Truth and Predication [2005], 1)

Book Ref

Davidson,Donald: 'Truth and Predication' [Belknap Harvard 2005], p.17


A Reaction

This, of course, was Davidson's big mission - to build on Tarski's theory a view of truth which dovetailed it with theories of meaning and reference.


The 32 ideas from 'Truth and Predication'

We recognise sentences at once as linguistic units; we then figure out their parts [Davidson]
If you assign semantics to sentence parts, the sentence fails to compose a whole [Davidson]
Top-down semantic analysis must begin with truth, as it is obvious, and explains linguistic usage [Davidson]
Many say that Tarski's definitions fail to connect truth to meaning [Davidson]
Tarski does not tell us what his various truth predicates have in common [Davidson]
Truth is the basic concept, because Convention-T is agreed to fix the truths of a language [Davidson]
'Satisfaction' is a generalised form of reference [Davidson]
Antirealism about truth prevents its use as an intersubjective standard [Davidson]
'Epistemic' truth depends what rational creatures can verify [Davidson]
There is nothing interesting or instructive for truths to correspond to [Davidson]
Coherence truth says a consistent set of sentences is true - which ties truth to belief [Davidson]
We can explain truth in terms of satisfaction - but also explain satisfaction in terms of truth [Davidson]
Satisfaction is a sort of reference, so maybe we can define truth in terms of reference? [Davidson]
Probability can be constrained by axioms, but that leaves open its truth nature [Davidson]
If we reject corresponding 'facts', we should also give up the linked idea of 'representations' [Davidson]
Utterances have the truth conditions intended by the speaker [Davidson]
The principle of charity says an interpreter must assume the logical constants [Davidson]
Truth is basic and clear, so don't try to replace it with something simpler [Davidson]
Modern predicates have 'places', and are sentences with singular terms deleted from the places [Davidson]
'Humanity belongs to Socrates' is about humanity, so it's a different proposition from 'Socrates is human' [Davidson]
We indicate use of a metaphor by its obvious falseness, or trivial truth [Davidson]
Meaning involves use, but a sentence has many uses, while meaning stays fixed [Davidson]
You only understand an order if you know what it is to obey it [Davidson]
A comprehensive theory of truth probably includes a theory of predication [Davidson]
The Slingshot assumes substitutions give logical equivalence, and thus identical correspondence [Davidson]
Two sentences can be rephrased by equivalent substitutions to correspond to the same thing [Davidson]
Axioms spell out sentence satisfaction. With no free variables, all sequences satisfy the truths [Davidson]
Tarski is not a disquotationalist, because you can assign truth to a sentence you can't quote [Davidson]
Treating predicates as sets drops the predicate for a new predicate 'is a member of', which is no help [Davidson]
The concept of truth can explain predication [Davidson]
To define a class of true sentences is to stipulate a possible language [Davidson]
Predicates are a source of generality in sentences [Davidson]