GE Morton wrote: ↑March 18th, 2020, 11:05 am
creation wrote: ↑March 17th, 2020, 11:13 pm
If 'truth' is not relative nor dependent upon an agent, then how is 'truth' arrived at exactly?
You seem to be suffering from the same confusion as TP. Whether a proposition is true is a separate question from the question of how someone determined that it is true.
So, if I am confused, then help stop this by answering the actual question I am asking you.
How is 'whether a proposition is true (or whether it is false)' determined?
By the way, "Whether a proposition is true" is NOT even a question anyway, so HOW could it be a "separate question"?
Also, do not let this stop you from answering this question;
How do you determine whether a proposition is true?
GE Morton wrote: ↑March 18th, 2020, 11:05 am
E.g., "It is raining outside" is true IFF it is raining outside.
How do you determine whether it is raining outside?
GE Morton wrote: ↑March 18th, 2020, 11:05 am
"Alfie determined that it is raining outside by looking out a window" is true if Alfie looked out a window and saw that it was raining outside.
How did "alfie" determine that it was actually 'rain' that "alfie" saw?
GE Morton wrote: ↑March 18th, 2020, 11:05 am
How Alfie determined that it is raining outside has no bearing on whether it is raining outside.
Hope this helps.
Not at all.
What EXACTLY determines that it
is raining outside?
If "alfie", all by them self, can not determine that it is raining outside by looking out a window, then 'what' exactly determines it
is raining outside? And, how is it determined that it
is raining outside?
My question still remains the same:
If 'truth' is not relative nor dependent upon an agent, then how is 'truth' arrived at exactly?
What exactly has a bearing on whether it
is raining outside?