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The contents of the truth by consensus page were merged into Consensus theory of truth on 2023-04-21. For the contribution history and old versions of the redirected page, please see its history; for the discussion at that location, see its talk page. |
"Another objection to the theory..." Surely this should be "An objection to the theory..." ? ( 20040302)
An objection to the theory is that it presupposes that for every possible statement, investigators are destined eventually to agree about it one way or the other. But this seems dubious: It has been argued, for example, that statements of beauty or moraliy are intrinsically controversial.
This objection is mistaken. The presupposition would only stand if it were assumed that all statements must have a truth value: Maybe Pierce would agree that statements like "She is beautiful" are not necessarily truth-holding statements.
The consensus theory of truth as defined is certainly in accord with such a response: As we can never agree as to whether or not "she is beautiful", the statement cannot be said to be true. But we cannot state that the counter-thesis ("she is not beautiful") is true either, otherwise we could come to an agreement about the first statement. Therefore, at least implicitly, Peirce states that according to the consensus theory of truth, not all statements can be assigned a truth value.
--I added this to the article.. Discussion is welcome ( 20040302)
In an article in "PC mag", John Dvorak discusses the utility of wikis. He encourages his readers to read this article, suggesting that it is this sort of truth that emerges on a wiki. See http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,1895,1835857,00.asp for details. Pcb21| Pete 12:44, 14 July 2005 (UTC)
Is not an irrelevant "See Also". The entire movie trilogy is predicated on the problems of a consesus theory of truth. That said, I'll add it to a list of semi-related things. -- 24.22.227.53 03:00, 31 July 2005 (UTC)
As it currently stands, I think that the article needs quite a bit of work, and I have started to do some of it but don't have time right now to do any more. Consequently I have left it in a lopsided state, i.e. by adding certain things and taking out a few others, it is not internally consistent. But I thought it worthwhile inserting at least the beginnings of additions. The article doesn't deal with counterfactual claims to validity, i.e. it seems too focussed on actual empirical consensus. It doesn't deal with Habermas's huge batch of recent work on this (including claims to validity other than truth claims), as well as critiques of his work by e.g. Rescher (which I've only read a bit of, so I can't yet fully represent his arguments). So I've just mentioned those things briefly but haven't had time to work them all out. I also temporarily took out the stuff about metaphysical idealism because it didn't seem relevant to the main thrust of the consensus theory of truth. Jeremy J. Shapiro 00:01, 30 August 2005 (UTC)
I agree with Jon Awbrey's comment that in Peirce pragmaticism and the consensus theory of truth are not the same thing. For Peirce, as I understand him, the core of pragmaticism has to do with the meaning of statements ultimately coming down to practical operations carried out in and on the world. The consensus theory of truth isn't about people sitting around and agreeing about things, it has to do with the likelihood that investigators will have the same or similar results in their interaction with the world. Jeremy J. Shapiro 06:26, 20 December 2005 (UTC)
Note to Editors.
Re: "The consensus theory of truth, originated by Charles Sanders Peirce who called it pragmatism, and later pragmaticism, holds that a statement is true if it would be agreed to by all those who investigate it if investigation were carried sufficiently far in that particular direction."
It is a false attribution to attribute "The consensus theory of truth" to C.S. Peirce. It is a false equation to equate "The consensus theory of truth" either to pragmatism or to pragmaticism.
I understand that writing an encyclopedia involves a certain amount of simplification, ignoring many of the nuances that specialists may wrangle over, but there's only so far that one can go with this simplification before it becomes a question of misinformation.
It might be a good idea to consider whether there really is such a thing as "the" consensus theory of truth. In other words, there is no consensus about what the consensus theory of truth is or ought to be. The only way to handle this is to do what any good lexicon would do, provide the variety of definitions for the variety of meanings that are actually current in practice or important to the history of the term.
Many readers will not care what term you use so long as you provide a definition. So you could call the various consensus theories: (1) the Gallup consensus theory, (2) Peirce's consensus theory, (3) Kirkham's theory of Peirce's whatever theory, (4) Peirce's omega point theory, (5) de Chardin's omega point theory, ad inf., so long as you give a characterization or a definition of each.
Other readers will expect your attribution of a theory to a tradition to stick to the terms that are actually used in the tradition itself. For the sticklers, then -- and who isn't on the wrong kind of day? -- it would be best to observe the following principles of attribution:
1. When we say that "P originated the Q-theory of R", the phrase Q should be one that P actually used, characteristically and as a matter of principle, to describe P's theory of R.
2. When we want to report the fact that the source S describes P's theory of R as a T-theory of R, then we should say that "S describes P's theory of R as a T-theory of R".
That addresses the issue of false attribution. I will address the false equation another time.
Jon Awbrey, 20 Dec 2005
I will keep a working draft here while I work on it over the next few day? weeks?
Jon Awbrey 03:40, 21 December 2005 (UTC)
Began: Jon Awbrey 03:40, 21 December 2005 (UTC)
The label "consensus theory of truth" is currently attached to a number of otherwise very diverse philosophical perspectives. Thus it becomes a reasonable question whether there is any such thing as "the" consensus theory of truth, that is, whether there is any single principle that all of these approaches have in common, or whether the phrase has become a catch-all for many unrelated positions. At present, there does not seem to be much consensus as to what a consensus theory of truth is, or ought to be.
As it a rule, it is important to distinguish the types of labels that the writers of a given tradition adopt for themselves, characteristically and as a matter of principle, and the types of labels that different schools of thought try to stick on each other.
Any person who has a comprehension of the everyday meanings of the words, "consensus, "theory", and "truth", and who hears them put together in this way for the first time, would quite reasonably think that the phrase refers to some such idea as that "the truth is nothing but whatever the majority believes". Most philosophical traditions that go by the title in question, or have it laid on them, would have something more complicated and qualified than that to say for themselves, however. This rest of this article takes up a sample of that variety.
Ended: Jon Awbrey 07:12, 21 December 2005 (UTC)
Began: Jon Awbrey 20:34, 21 December 2005 (UTC)
The label consensus theory of truth is currently attached to a number of otherwise very diverse philosophical perspectives. This makes it reasonable to ask whether there is any such thing as the consensus theory of truth at all, in other words, whether there is one single principle that the various approaches have in common, or whether the phrase is being used as a catch-all for a host of unrelated positions. As of this writing, there does not seem to be much of a consensus as to what a consensus theory of truth is or even ought to be!
Someone who understands the everyday meanings of the words, 'consensus, 'theory', 'truth', and who hears them put together in this way for the first time, may reasonably think that the phrase refers to some such idea as that the truth is nothing but whatever the majority believes. However, most philosophical traditions that use the phrase consensus theory of truth would have something more complicated and qualified than that to say for themselves.
Ended: Jon Awbrey 20:42, 21 December 2005 (UTC)
I didn't like the snootiness of "Consensus in the Popular Sense", especially since the whole idea of inquiry and education is to make consensus popular. Although math folk could use a phrase like "Naive Consensus" in a non-pejorative sense, most folk would not hear it that way, so I'm trying "Bare Consensus" -- in the sense of a zeroth or a first approximation to consensus -- for a few days to see if I like it. Physics folk may think of "bare mass" and "dressed mass", if that helps. Jon Awbrey 05:24, 27 December 2005 (UTC)
I have removed this section and put it here for justification, clarification, and possible improvement or rewriting... Kenosis 00:58, 21 April 2006 (UTC)
This article needs some work. I'd like to start by going through the introduction. There is no summary, no definition and description at present. The intro currently reads as follows: ... Kenosis 19:54, 2 July 2006 (UTC)
JA: It never made much sense to describe Peirce as having a consensus theory of truth, so I'm moving this material here until the useful bits can be sorted out to more fitting pages. Jon Awbrey 04:52, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
JA: I retired a while back. Whether this constitutes a good use of my retirement is another question entirely. " I'm reviewing the situation".
JA: The more I look at it the more problematic this entire begins to look. The first time I ran across it I was much more tolerant of unsourced statements than I am today, and I spent a lot of effort trying to figure out "What was he/she thinking?" in regard to the statements that I found in it. As I have come to realize, that is not my job. So I will put the remainder of the article here for review, and probably start deleting stuff that nobody can source with credible sources. Jon Awbrey 13:22, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
JA: There does not appear to be a consensual definition of consensus theory of truth. The current introduction dances around that problem a bit, but maybe it needs to be stated more straightforwardly.
Again we have the fork with common usage versus technical usage, so we need to decide if this article is meant to be a documentation of popular usage or an article about a technical concept.
The only definition that I found so far in the standard philosophy references that I consulted is the one that refers to consensus gentium. This was previously described as bare or naive consensus. This seems to be recognized as a fallacy, equivalent to argumentum ad populum, and I do not not find any writers of note saying of themselves that they subscribe to such a theory. Jon Awbrey 13:58, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
JA: I read a lot of Habermas in the 90's (years not Fahrenheit) and have a whole shelf of his works, and though his writing, as translated perhaps, makes Peirce seem like Spot and Puff by comparison, I'd be happy to check the statements about his having a consensus theory if the editors who added them would give me half a clue as to the loci cited. I am highly suspicious of secondary sources, however, as it seems to be the general rule here that writers will often attribute a strawperson consensus theory to others while seldom confessing to anything so naive in their own writes. Jon Awbrey 18:12, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
This just removed from the intro. No doubt there's more to say here, but any seasoned WP editor will recognize this is not how the article should say it. ... Kenosis 17:18, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
How about moving these big sections of text to a subpage as a workspace, rather than filling up the discussion area? Not everyone has high speed internet access. -- Blainster 22:09, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
JA: In view of Habermas' use of universal pragmatics to describe his own position, I propose moving the Habermas material to a section devoted to him on the pragmatic theory of truth page. Either that or just merge it with the article on universal pragmatics. Discussion? Jon Awbrey 02:32, 2 August 2006 (UTC)
I just discovered that the article Truth by consensus exists, which appears to cover essentially the same topic as this one. Does anyone else agree that the two articles should be merged? I suggest keeping this one, simply because it's the older article, and merging the contents of the other one here, but the other way around would work just as well too. Robofish ( talk) 12:52, 8 July 2010 (UTC)
PLEASE DO NOT MERGE: "consensus theory of truth" has a long and venerable tradition; "truth by consensus" is a phrase popularized by more modern philosophers, and has no relation to such ancient conceptions as consensus gentium. brianspears1776 ( talk) —Preceding undated comment added 05:59, 26 January 2011 (UTC).
"A consensus theory of truth is the process of taking statements to be true simply because people generally agree upon them." ... this is just not true (oh the irony). Seriously, the consensus theory of truth doesn't say that. Maybe this is what some philosophers or especially unknowing amateurs conclude from a theory of consensus, but this is neither actual message nor core point, so I don't really think it's an appropriate first sentence... (How philosophic thoughts are treated here is generally pretty sad, but anyways...) A better one would f.e. be: "A consensus theory of truth is a philosophical believe in the #Theory of Knowledge stating that there is no objective truth existing or observable and that therefore the only term of 'truth' we think about and use is one generated from human ourselves, genereated from the perception of the majority of humans and the majority of observations."
134.3.243.131 ( talk) 22:39, 23 October 2013 (UTC)
You get more hits if you Google "Elvis is alive" than for "Elvis is dead". Suggest this "fact" is added to this wiki article. 82.25.154.11 ( talk) —Preceding undated comment added 13:01, 6 February 2017 (UTC)
This article is rated Start-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | |||||||||||||||||||||||
|
The contents of the truth by consensus page were merged into Consensus theory of truth on 2023-04-21. For the contribution history and old versions of the redirected page, please see its history; for the discussion at that location, see its talk page. |
"Another objection to the theory..." Surely this should be "An objection to the theory..." ? ( 20040302)
An objection to the theory is that it presupposes that for every possible statement, investigators are destined eventually to agree about it one way or the other. But this seems dubious: It has been argued, for example, that statements of beauty or moraliy are intrinsically controversial.
This objection is mistaken. The presupposition would only stand if it were assumed that all statements must have a truth value: Maybe Pierce would agree that statements like "She is beautiful" are not necessarily truth-holding statements.
The consensus theory of truth as defined is certainly in accord with such a response: As we can never agree as to whether or not "she is beautiful", the statement cannot be said to be true. But we cannot state that the counter-thesis ("she is not beautiful") is true either, otherwise we could come to an agreement about the first statement. Therefore, at least implicitly, Peirce states that according to the consensus theory of truth, not all statements can be assigned a truth value.
--I added this to the article.. Discussion is welcome ( 20040302)
In an article in "PC mag", John Dvorak discusses the utility of wikis. He encourages his readers to read this article, suggesting that it is this sort of truth that emerges on a wiki. See http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,1895,1835857,00.asp for details. Pcb21| Pete 12:44, 14 July 2005 (UTC)
Is not an irrelevant "See Also". The entire movie trilogy is predicated on the problems of a consesus theory of truth. That said, I'll add it to a list of semi-related things. -- 24.22.227.53 03:00, 31 July 2005 (UTC)
As it currently stands, I think that the article needs quite a bit of work, and I have started to do some of it but don't have time right now to do any more. Consequently I have left it in a lopsided state, i.e. by adding certain things and taking out a few others, it is not internally consistent. But I thought it worthwhile inserting at least the beginnings of additions. The article doesn't deal with counterfactual claims to validity, i.e. it seems too focussed on actual empirical consensus. It doesn't deal with Habermas's huge batch of recent work on this (including claims to validity other than truth claims), as well as critiques of his work by e.g. Rescher (which I've only read a bit of, so I can't yet fully represent his arguments). So I've just mentioned those things briefly but haven't had time to work them all out. I also temporarily took out the stuff about metaphysical idealism because it didn't seem relevant to the main thrust of the consensus theory of truth. Jeremy J. Shapiro 00:01, 30 August 2005 (UTC)
I agree with Jon Awbrey's comment that in Peirce pragmaticism and the consensus theory of truth are not the same thing. For Peirce, as I understand him, the core of pragmaticism has to do with the meaning of statements ultimately coming down to practical operations carried out in and on the world. The consensus theory of truth isn't about people sitting around and agreeing about things, it has to do with the likelihood that investigators will have the same or similar results in their interaction with the world. Jeremy J. Shapiro 06:26, 20 December 2005 (UTC)
Note to Editors.
Re: "The consensus theory of truth, originated by Charles Sanders Peirce who called it pragmatism, and later pragmaticism, holds that a statement is true if it would be agreed to by all those who investigate it if investigation were carried sufficiently far in that particular direction."
It is a false attribution to attribute "The consensus theory of truth" to C.S. Peirce. It is a false equation to equate "The consensus theory of truth" either to pragmatism or to pragmaticism.
I understand that writing an encyclopedia involves a certain amount of simplification, ignoring many of the nuances that specialists may wrangle over, but there's only so far that one can go with this simplification before it becomes a question of misinformation.
It might be a good idea to consider whether there really is such a thing as "the" consensus theory of truth. In other words, there is no consensus about what the consensus theory of truth is or ought to be. The only way to handle this is to do what any good lexicon would do, provide the variety of definitions for the variety of meanings that are actually current in practice or important to the history of the term.
Many readers will not care what term you use so long as you provide a definition. So you could call the various consensus theories: (1) the Gallup consensus theory, (2) Peirce's consensus theory, (3) Kirkham's theory of Peirce's whatever theory, (4) Peirce's omega point theory, (5) de Chardin's omega point theory, ad inf., so long as you give a characterization or a definition of each.
Other readers will expect your attribution of a theory to a tradition to stick to the terms that are actually used in the tradition itself. For the sticklers, then -- and who isn't on the wrong kind of day? -- it would be best to observe the following principles of attribution:
1. When we say that "P originated the Q-theory of R", the phrase Q should be one that P actually used, characteristically and as a matter of principle, to describe P's theory of R.
2. When we want to report the fact that the source S describes P's theory of R as a T-theory of R, then we should say that "S describes P's theory of R as a T-theory of R".
That addresses the issue of false attribution. I will address the false equation another time.
Jon Awbrey, 20 Dec 2005
I will keep a working draft here while I work on it over the next few day? weeks?
Jon Awbrey 03:40, 21 December 2005 (UTC)
Began: Jon Awbrey 03:40, 21 December 2005 (UTC)
The label "consensus theory of truth" is currently attached to a number of otherwise very diverse philosophical perspectives. Thus it becomes a reasonable question whether there is any such thing as "the" consensus theory of truth, that is, whether there is any single principle that all of these approaches have in common, or whether the phrase has become a catch-all for many unrelated positions. At present, there does not seem to be much consensus as to what a consensus theory of truth is, or ought to be.
As it a rule, it is important to distinguish the types of labels that the writers of a given tradition adopt for themselves, characteristically and as a matter of principle, and the types of labels that different schools of thought try to stick on each other.
Any person who has a comprehension of the everyday meanings of the words, "consensus, "theory", and "truth", and who hears them put together in this way for the first time, would quite reasonably think that the phrase refers to some such idea as that "the truth is nothing but whatever the majority believes". Most philosophical traditions that go by the title in question, or have it laid on them, would have something more complicated and qualified than that to say for themselves, however. This rest of this article takes up a sample of that variety.
Ended: Jon Awbrey 07:12, 21 December 2005 (UTC)
Began: Jon Awbrey 20:34, 21 December 2005 (UTC)
The label consensus theory of truth is currently attached to a number of otherwise very diverse philosophical perspectives. This makes it reasonable to ask whether there is any such thing as the consensus theory of truth at all, in other words, whether there is one single principle that the various approaches have in common, or whether the phrase is being used as a catch-all for a host of unrelated positions. As of this writing, there does not seem to be much of a consensus as to what a consensus theory of truth is or even ought to be!
Someone who understands the everyday meanings of the words, 'consensus, 'theory', 'truth', and who hears them put together in this way for the first time, may reasonably think that the phrase refers to some such idea as that the truth is nothing but whatever the majority believes. However, most philosophical traditions that use the phrase consensus theory of truth would have something more complicated and qualified than that to say for themselves.
Ended: Jon Awbrey 20:42, 21 December 2005 (UTC)
I didn't like the snootiness of "Consensus in the Popular Sense", especially since the whole idea of inquiry and education is to make consensus popular. Although math folk could use a phrase like "Naive Consensus" in a non-pejorative sense, most folk would not hear it that way, so I'm trying "Bare Consensus" -- in the sense of a zeroth or a first approximation to consensus -- for a few days to see if I like it. Physics folk may think of "bare mass" and "dressed mass", if that helps. Jon Awbrey 05:24, 27 December 2005 (UTC)
I have removed this section and put it here for justification, clarification, and possible improvement or rewriting... Kenosis 00:58, 21 April 2006 (UTC)
This article needs some work. I'd like to start by going through the introduction. There is no summary, no definition and description at present. The intro currently reads as follows: ... Kenosis 19:54, 2 July 2006 (UTC)
JA: It never made much sense to describe Peirce as having a consensus theory of truth, so I'm moving this material here until the useful bits can be sorted out to more fitting pages. Jon Awbrey 04:52, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
JA: I retired a while back. Whether this constitutes a good use of my retirement is another question entirely. " I'm reviewing the situation".
JA: The more I look at it the more problematic this entire begins to look. The first time I ran across it I was much more tolerant of unsourced statements than I am today, and I spent a lot of effort trying to figure out "What was he/she thinking?" in regard to the statements that I found in it. As I have come to realize, that is not my job. So I will put the remainder of the article here for review, and probably start deleting stuff that nobody can source with credible sources. Jon Awbrey 13:22, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
JA: There does not appear to be a consensual definition of consensus theory of truth. The current introduction dances around that problem a bit, but maybe it needs to be stated more straightforwardly.
Again we have the fork with common usage versus technical usage, so we need to decide if this article is meant to be a documentation of popular usage or an article about a technical concept.
The only definition that I found so far in the standard philosophy references that I consulted is the one that refers to consensus gentium. This was previously described as bare or naive consensus. This seems to be recognized as a fallacy, equivalent to argumentum ad populum, and I do not not find any writers of note saying of themselves that they subscribe to such a theory. Jon Awbrey 13:58, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
JA: I read a lot of Habermas in the 90's (years not Fahrenheit) and have a whole shelf of his works, and though his writing, as translated perhaps, makes Peirce seem like Spot and Puff by comparison, I'd be happy to check the statements about his having a consensus theory if the editors who added them would give me half a clue as to the loci cited. I am highly suspicious of secondary sources, however, as it seems to be the general rule here that writers will often attribute a strawperson consensus theory to others while seldom confessing to anything so naive in their own writes. Jon Awbrey 18:12, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
This just removed from the intro. No doubt there's more to say here, but any seasoned WP editor will recognize this is not how the article should say it. ... Kenosis 17:18, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
How about moving these big sections of text to a subpage as a workspace, rather than filling up the discussion area? Not everyone has high speed internet access. -- Blainster 22:09, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
JA: In view of Habermas' use of universal pragmatics to describe his own position, I propose moving the Habermas material to a section devoted to him on the pragmatic theory of truth page. Either that or just merge it with the article on universal pragmatics. Discussion? Jon Awbrey 02:32, 2 August 2006 (UTC)
I just discovered that the article Truth by consensus exists, which appears to cover essentially the same topic as this one. Does anyone else agree that the two articles should be merged? I suggest keeping this one, simply because it's the older article, and merging the contents of the other one here, but the other way around would work just as well too. Robofish ( talk) 12:52, 8 July 2010 (UTC)
PLEASE DO NOT MERGE: "consensus theory of truth" has a long and venerable tradition; "truth by consensus" is a phrase popularized by more modern philosophers, and has no relation to such ancient conceptions as consensus gentium. brianspears1776 ( talk) —Preceding undated comment added 05:59, 26 January 2011 (UTC).
"A consensus theory of truth is the process of taking statements to be true simply because people generally agree upon them." ... this is just not true (oh the irony). Seriously, the consensus theory of truth doesn't say that. Maybe this is what some philosophers or especially unknowing amateurs conclude from a theory of consensus, but this is neither actual message nor core point, so I don't really think it's an appropriate first sentence... (How philosophic thoughts are treated here is generally pretty sad, but anyways...) A better one would f.e. be: "A consensus theory of truth is a philosophical believe in the #Theory of Knowledge stating that there is no objective truth existing or observable and that therefore the only term of 'truth' we think about and use is one generated from human ourselves, genereated from the perception of the majority of humans and the majority of observations."
134.3.243.131 ( talk) 22:39, 23 October 2013 (UTC)
You get more hits if you Google "Elvis is alive" than for "Elvis is dead". Suggest this "fact" is added to this wiki article. 82.25.154.11 ( talk) —Preceding undated comment added 13:01, 6 February 2017 (UTC)