Terrapin Station wrote: ↑March 28th, 2020, 10:38 amNothing about the vast majority of states of affairs hinges on being named. Again, states of affairs would obtain whether there was anyone around to do any naming or not.When one declares something a fact it has been named. Whether one uses a philosophical method to do the naming, by which one argues that the naming will obtain whether there is anyone around or not, or uses a different method to declare something a truth (i.e. a proposition), is not relevant. One can argue that there is a difference in qualitative value, e.g. utilitarian value, but that would be something else than the claim that facts are intrinsically otherwise than truth.
Terrapin Station wrote: ↑March 28th, 2020, 10:38 amThe method used for naming originates from a perspective on reality which requires truth conditions to determine its validity. The truth conditions originate from a philosophical method and that implies that a certain belief is involved. At question would be: is it valid to assume that what is established a fact will remain so in time? As it appears, based on mounting evidence, the answer is no.it requires the formulation of a perspective which implies the requirement of truth conditions.Names aren't true or false, they're just sounds/text strings we associate with something else.
A question that may provide an insight: could existence, the Universe and beyond, be summed in a single fact? If not, then that disproves the ground for the claim that facts are intrinsically different from truths.