Sentence examples for characterising truth from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

This entails a limitation of the Tarskian T-schema characterising truth, i.e., of the equivalence Tr⟨A⟩ ↔ A, where 'Tr' is the truth predicate for the relevant language, and ⟨A⟩ is the appropriate name of sentence A; and a retreat to a rigid distinction between an object language and its metalanguage.

Similar(59)

Eagle (2005: §4–5) suggests that a system is predictable iff, conditional on what we know about the past states of the system, and knowing the laws, we may have a posterior credence in future states that is closer to the truth than our prior credence (where closeness to the truth is characterised by having a more inaccuracy-minimising credence, as in Joyce 1998).

But it would be closer to the truth to characterise him as an arch-conservative who pulled off a stunning confidence trick.

Camus called Meursault "a man who… agrees to die for the truth" and characterised him as "the only Christ that we deserve".

Much of this was characterised by speculation, half truths, and a breathtaking lack of sensitivity to the needs of a very small child who was rendered invisible.

The records are characterised by a rhetoric of truth and justice designed to effect closure.

But what if our geographic ground truth is actually characterised by significant biases?

These semantic formulations of (or incursions into) metaphysical realism are unacceptable to realists who are deflationists about truth, denying that truth is a substantive notion which can be used to characterise alternative metaphysical views [see the entry truth: deflationary theory of].

Media: Leaks and half-truths Leaks, injunctions, half-truths and conflicting accounts characterised the media's coverage of the cash for honours affair.

He characterised Seacole as "a plain truth-speaking woman who has lived an adventurous life amid scenes which have never yet found a historian".

The human being is characterised by a movement between untruth and truth; by an attempt to reach beyond one's current situation to seek something one does not yet possess.

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