Immanuel Can wrote:Terrapin Station wrote:What would an extramental position be?
"Position" in your sentence is presumably a synonym for "attitude" or "opinion": in which case, of course all such are mental. But the thing they are a
position-on is not mental.
That's fine, but you asked if the position was objective, not whether what it's about is objective.
It's similar to if we're talking about a book on Yellowstone National Park. There's the book and what the book is about. The book might be in the library, but Yellowstone National Park isn't in the library. If you're asking about the book, I'm going to answer about the book. If you want to ask something about the extension of the topic of the book, then you'd ask that.
A position on, say, the future viability of some particular flora or fauna in Yellowstone National Park is going to be subjective, because of what positions are, but the future viability on some particular flora or fauna in Yellowstone National Park isn't subjective. You had asked about the status of the position I stated however.
Or imagine a book on the Yellowstone River. If I were to say, "Books are not made of water," but then I talked about a book about the Yellowstone River, you might ask, "Is that book made of water?" I'd say, "No. How would you suppose a book made out of water would work, anyway?" If you'd wanted to ask if the Yellowstone River consisted of water instead, then you wouldn't ask about the book per se.
You had asked about the position per se.
Is the above statement, then, not aimed at or grounded in in a common "truth"
I don't even know what you'd be referring to by "a common truth." Again, in my view, truth value is a judgment about the relation of a proposition to something else (the something else depends on just what approach to truth someone is using, whether correspondence or coherence or whatever). I don't know what a "common judgment" would be, unless you're just saying a judgment that's statistically common.
that you would say you and I should both believe? Do you not think I (rationally, not morally) "ought" to believe that "truths cannot be objective"? And would you not think me (rationally) "wrong" or "incorrect" if I did not?
Again, it's important to understand the standard analytic distinction between facts and truth. It seems like you're conflating the two. It's a fact that truths are not objective, and that's an objective fact. It's not an objective
truth. Truth is something different (again, it's a
judgment about the relation of a proposition to something else.) Re normatives ("should," "ought," etc.), there are no factual normatives, there can be no true or false normative statements (and that's a fact, and it's objective as such). Personally, I don't normally "do" normatives like that--"you should believe" etc. I will utter normatives in cases where either (a) I'm saying what I'd like to be the case ethically, or (b) I'm giving advice to someone I care about when I know a goal they have in mind and I think that something specific will help them reach that goal (like "You shouldn't eat a gallon of ice cream every evening if you want to lose weight"), but those are usually the only situations where I'd say anything like a normative.
And if not, then why state it, since you would then have no expectation of us having any reason to agree on it?
I indeed have no expectation that anyone is going to agree with anything I say in forums like this. I say what I do because I like to express myself, I like to broadcast what I think. I do that especially when I think something different than the norm in context, because that's what I tend to find most interesting myself--people who think something unusual.
We might add that the proposition that all propositions are relative or subjective is also surely self-defeating.
That's only the case when you assume that someone wouldn't say, "It's true that all truth-statements are relative" is relative. But that is relative. Surely, for example, you'd assign "F" to "It's true that all truth-statements are relative."
Terrapin Station wrote:That would only make sense if you were to buy realism for some abstracts.
No, that doesn't follow. I think it's a bit of a category error there.
Numbers have a sort of
adjectival function, not a
nominal function. We don't have to make them into concrete nouns in order for them to do their work: they are descriptors of attributes of quantity in the objective world, not things-in-themselves. So we don't need to posit realism for numbers themselves: only to the state of the objects to which they refer.
Wait, so numbers in your ontology are "descriptors of attributes of quantity." What exactly, as existents, are those? What are they made of, for example?
That being said, their application to the objective world seems very direct and predictable, does it not?
Just like natural languages, I'd say.