L
Leela
Guest
I’m not sure what’s with the capital-T in truth as if it were a proper noun. When I say that truth exists all I mean is that certain sentences are true. Must I also think that truth existed before there were any sentences that could be said to have this property?… Here is a kind of **reductio ad absurdum ** argument to make this clear.
Suppose Truth did **not **exist whatsoever, and that all of us were perfectly aware of this. What would be the point of engaging in social-contextual activities of justifying my beliefs to others? All of our epistemic motivations of justifying our beliefs to others would then be reduced to the practical motivations of winning a game, like winning Chess or Monopoly if we thought the truth didn’t exist at all, and there was no hope of ever attaining it.
Agreed. If I argue with you it is because I think that one of us is actually right and one of us is actually wrong.So the very non-existence of truth–and my awareness of this-- would necessarily render all my social activities of justifying my beliefs to others intrinsically meaningless with respect to the question of whether or not my beliefs were, in fact, true, since my only purpose in engaging in these activities would then be purely pragmatic .
But this is simply contrary to the facts of what everyone takes herself/himself to be doing when she/he engages in the activities of justifying her/his belief to others. That I think my beliefs are true, is precisely WHY I try to justify it to others. I don’t merely want to justify my beliefs because I want to win-over my opponent, but also because I think that what I believe is true from the start and that he ought to accept what is true independent of whether or not I believe it.
Explaining why others are in error is the practice of justification which we only do as a wrangling over whether we should be saying that a given proposition is true, but I don’t see where a metaphysical entity called Truth needs to be supposed any more than when we say that a firetruck is red we need to imagine a metaphysical entity of Redness existing “out there.” Truth and redness as concepts are two ways of relating words or sentences with other words or sentences.If you or Rorty are going to assert that the concept of Truth is **not **logically and metaphysically prior to epistemic justification, then you will have to explain why everyone is in **error **about what he or she takes herself or himself to be doing in the realms of public discourse.
Best,
Leela