By Schubert Ogden
According to Danto, "Words like 'true' and 'real' . . . describe nothing in the world. Nor do they describe features of sentences. They pertain wholly to the space which opens up between the world and language." Thus "\[a\] sentence is true when it corresponds with the world, as something is real when it corresponds with a \ [true?\] sentence." Wiki Markup
Question: If this may be said of at least two of the so-called convertible transcendentals (i.e., verum and ens,) may it not also be said, mutatis mutandis, of all the others, and so of convertible transcendentals as such?
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