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Terrapin Station wrote: ↑March 19th, 2020, 3:04 pm
I've long since filed you under "uncooperative posters" by the way.
The reason I was asking you about what sense of "reality" you were using is because the sense you're using will impact the answer.
My argument intends to lay reality as a concept at the position of "
the eye of the beholder", i.e. it is claimed that the perspective per se by which one can give substance to the term reality, cannot be judged.
One could pose that since the Sun rises each day, Sunrise is a reality.
Equally, one could pose that everything that one could argue to know about one's environment, will amount to what one can denote as "reality".
Considering that one requires truth conditions to form a perspective, one can pose that by the question-ability of the nature of the concept reality it can be stated that reality is truthful in nature, by which one can derive a qualitative distinctionability that can be used to examine any claim that one could make about one's environment, i.e. to verify any type of knowledge that one could have.
Terrapin Station wrote: ↑March 19th, 2020, 3:04 pm
Re "given in the context of a 'search for truth'," that seems to allude to notions that I don't buy into. "Truth" on my view is a judgment that people make about the relationship of propositions to something else. It's not really something we literally "search for" from my perspective. I'd rather say that people are trying to discover facts--facts being states of affairs, often where facts are contra to beliefs, assumptions, etc.
Before truth as a concept can be considered, does that not imply a search? How would one even be able to think of the idea if one did not start looking for it at some point in time?
"
try to discover facts" could be denoted as a search for truth.
When one is ought to consider facts to posses a certain differiantiating quality by which one can make claims of a certain quality about one's environment, that by itself is essentially simply a truth condition that forms one's perspective on (what one assumes to be) reality.
Terrapin Station wrote: ↑March 19th, 2020, 3:04 pmBut I haven't the faintest idea what "reality in the context of a search for truth (or facts)" would be saying, and since you're an uncooperative poster, I'm never going to know, because you're never going to bother trying to explain it in a way that I'd have any idea what you're on about.
At any rate, sets are definitely "real" in the sense that we've constructed that as a way of talking about things. Aside from that, locations are definitely real in an extramental sense. And we can talk about locations A through Z.
Would a set be applicable to time?