- #36
honestrosewater
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Does your truth game allow draws? Or is it just win or lose? I thought truth was winning and falsity was losing. What would drawing be?Mentat said:A game ends when no more legal moves can be made (as with all games), for whatever reason. Do you play chess? If so, think of the difference between winning by stalemate, and winning by checkmate.
If the definitions are stated in words, the same problem applies. How are they to know the definitions mean the same to each of them? Even if this isn't a problem for language games, I am not a language game, and it is a problem for me when playing language games. Some of the words I use refer to objects which are themselves not words. How are two people to know the words they are using refer to the same nonword objects? The same problem arises for other means of public communication.Sure, but I don't see the relevance. If the definitions of the words were not established from the beginning (though both assumed that the other was using the same set of definitions as they were) then confusion should be expected.
It seems you are suggesting that only public statements can be true. This is why I suggested that the arguer or player or whatever be the same person- so that language games can be played privately, and private statements can be true. There's surely a better way of explaining this, but I'll have to try again later.
So you think you can infer "X knows Y" from "X does Z"?They simply hadn't cleared up all the rules of their language-game yet. Think of trying to play chess with someone who thought that rooks, in addition to their actual legal moves, could also move in space in the forward diagonal directions. They just aren't playing by the same rules as you are, so you are technically not even playing the same game (though there are versions of Shogi (Japanese chess) in which the aforementioned rook moves are indeed legal).