zerinus wrote:How we determine the truth of something is a separate issue entirely from the definition of truth, or what truth IS. So far we have only been discussing the latter, not the former. Once we have agreed on the latter, we can start discussing the former.
(My added emphasis)
OK, so definitions first, then discussion. So:
Chap wrote:I am really excited by the prospect that this board will be the place where, at long last, a universally acceptable and succinct definition of the words 'true' and 'truth' is arrived at. Then we can really get on with discussing whether the Book of Mormon is true!!!
So, where's that definition? That will give us firm ground to stand on at last.
(I am a bit worried, though. If we are agreed that we need a definition of truth before we are allowed to start discussing whether something is true or not ... well, in order to know whether we have found a definition of truth, don't we need first to define what a definition is? Otherwise we might think we had a definition of truth when we really didn't. And then a discussion based on that supposed, but in fact illusory, definition will be a waste of time ... Oh dear, I can see some serious problems ahead ... )
Then ....
zerinus wrote:It is not necessary to arrive at a rigorous philosophical definition of truth in order to determine whether something is true or not. There are millions of Latter-day Saints who know that the Book of Mormon is true without having done that. But when somebody insists on taking the course of the discussion in that direction, then it needs to be discussed.
D&C 93:
24 And truth is knowledge of things as they are, and as they were, and as they are to come;
So we are going to start doing definitions after all ... and you are not going to try to explain what, in your view, a definition is. OK. The definition of truth that you cite (which is, according to Mormons, a divine rather than a human utterance, since it is in D&C) depends crucially on the concept of knowledge.
So how do we know when we have knowledge? Since Mormons do, I believe, customarily claim in public that they know things, they must be pretty clear on (for instance) the distinction between knowledge and belief, for example. Or on the distinction between knowledge and delusion. I await your further clarifications with interest.