释义 |
Definition of truth condition in English: truth conditionnoun Logic 1The condition under which a given proposition is true. Example sentencesExamples - The belief condition excludes ignorance, the truth condition excludes error, and the justification condition excludes mere opinion.
- Consequently, he suggests alternative truth conditions for propositions of the form Possibly p, namely, that it is possible that p be true in some possible world.
- Conditions 1 and 2 jointly entail the truth condition for knowledge: S knows b to have F (at t) only if b does have F (at t).
- The resulting sentence would have a different flavour, and in some instances would be mildly eccentric, but would not have a different truth condition.
- Neither kind of truth condition has proved entirely satisfactory.
- 1.1 A statement of the condition under which a given proposition is true, sometimes taken to be the meaning of the proposition.
Example sentencesExamples - Roughly put, noncognitivists think that moral statements have no truth conditions.
- Nothing in this statement of the truth conditions of a counterfactual conditional seems to make any reference, either explicit or implicit, to causality.
- We see that for different reasons none of these candidates can be included in the truth conditions for statements of the form ‘A remembers that p.’ I believe we do not have the conception of anything else that might fill the gap.
- Such a response, however, requires a satisfactory account of the truth conditions of modal statements - something that lies outside the scope of this article
Definition of truth condition in US English: truth conditionnoun Logic 1The condition under which a given proposition is true. Example sentencesExamples - Neither kind of truth condition has proved entirely satisfactory.
- Consequently, he suggests alternative truth conditions for propositions of the form Possibly p, namely, that it is possible that p be true in some possible world.
- Conditions 1 and 2 jointly entail the truth condition for knowledge: S knows b to have F (at t) only if b does have F (at t).
- The belief condition excludes ignorance, the truth condition excludes error, and the justification condition excludes mere opinion.
- The resulting sentence would have a different flavour, and in some instances would be mildly eccentric, but would not have a different truth condition.
- 1.1 A statement of the condition under which a given proposition is true, sometimes taken to be the meaning of the proposition.
Example sentencesExamples - Such a response, however, requires a satisfactory account of the truth conditions of modal statements - something that lies outside the scope of this article
- We see that for different reasons none of these candidates can be included in the truth conditions for statements of the form ‘A remembers that p.’ I believe we do not have the conception of anything else that might fill the gap.
- Nothing in this statement of the truth conditions of a counterfactual conditional seems to make any reference, either explicit or implicit, to causality.
- Roughly put, noncognitivists think that moral statements have no truth conditions.
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