Terrapin Station wrote:Greta wrote:The car keys flushed down the loo is hopefully neither fact nor truth,
Right. As I said, it's a falsehood. We have need of saying that some things are false.
We sorted out that need a long time ago - mostly commonsense, augmented by science, which is really just commonsense applied in a more detailed, less presumptuous way. That leaves the subjective/objective divide, which both science and "commonsense people" tend to leave alone.
Terrapin Station wrote:However, we can misinterpret correct facts to create untruths so the distinction philosophically seems to be that facts are phenomena while truths are Kant's noumena.
That's not at all the standard philosophical distinction, and if you try to read that into most philosophical, scientific etc. literature you're going to wind up very confused.
Again, the problem arises because we have two truth-value possibilities (barring modalities, etc.) for something like "The cat is on the mat"--that's either true or false.
So if "true" is noumena in the Kantian sense, then what is "false"? A completely different sort of thing ontologically? Why would the two different truth values be two completely different sorts of things ontologically?
I was about to say "no, I'm not confused" but that's not true

. We are all confused in varying degreess, hence these kinds of conversations.
Still, my personal level of confusion seems functional enough. Start with the obvious, commonsense, which works in almost all situations. That breaks the back of most truth-related problems. If it looks, walks and quacks like a duck then it might as well be a duck - unless there is contention that demands closer analysis, ie. science.
Science's advances increasingly highlight the limitations of commonsense when applied to things outside of human society and the more familiar aspects of nature. The limitation especially applies to dynamics at the extremes of our physical laws such as the birth and existence of the universe, subatomic realms, black holes and, arguably, life and consciousness.