I might still want to know which concept I’m using when I say something is true. I might also want to know which concept you’re using when you say something is true. Sure, if I don’t know that (or am not confident I know that) then we can taboo “truth,” but that gets unwieldy; if we can agree on a shared referent then communication is more efficient. Tabooing key words is sort of like running code under a debugger… a great way of identifying points of failure, but not the way I want to live my life. If I know whether someone’s conception of truth is correspondist or epistemic, they can say “X is true” and I know what they mean about X without having to taboo “truth”.
This is something I understand and I can agree with. But it’s a very practical problem, like making Europeans and Americans agree on the meaning of the word “football”. It’s very likely that I’m still missing something, though (see metaphysicist reply).
I might still want to know which concept I’m using when I say something is true.
I might also want to know which concept you’re using when you say something is true.
Sure, if I don’t know that (or am not confident I know that) then we can taboo “truth,” but that gets unwieldy; if we can agree on a shared referent then communication is more efficient. Tabooing key words is sort of like running code under a debugger… a great way of identifying points of failure, but not the way I want to live my life.
If I know whether someone’s conception of truth is correspondist or epistemic, they can say “X is true” and I know what they mean about X without having to taboo “truth”.
This is something I understand and I can agree with. But it’s a very practical problem, like making Europeans and Americans agree on the meaning of the word “football”. It’s very likely that I’m still missing something, though (see metaphysicist reply).