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Essay(s) by William James
The _Existence Of Julius Caesar
William James
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       [Footnote: Originally printed under the title of 'Truth versus Truthfulness,' in the Journal of Philosophy.]
       My account of truth is purely logical and relates to its definition only. I contend that you cannot tell what the WORD 'true' MEANS, as applied to a statement, without invoking the CONCEPT OF THE STATEMENTS WORKINGS.
       Assume, to fix our ideas, a universe composed of two things only: imperial Caesar dead and turned to clay, and me, saying 'Caesar really existed.' Most persons would naively deem truth to be thereby uttered, and say that by a sort of actio in distans my statement had taken direct hold of the other fact.
       But have my words so certainly denoted THAT Caesar?--or so certainly connoted HIS individual attributes? To fill out the complete measure of what the epithet 'true' may ideally mean, my thought ought to bear a fully determinate and unambiguous 'one-to-one-relation' to its own particular object. In the ultrasimple universe imagined the reference is uncertified. Were there two Caesars we shouldn't know which was meant. The conditions of truth thus seem incomplete in this universe of discourse so that it must be enlarged.
       Transcendentalists enlarge it by invoking an absolute mind which, as it owns all the facts, can sovereignly correlate them. If it intends that my statement SHALL refer to that identical Caesar, and that the attributes I have in mind SHALL mean his attributes, that intention suffices to make the statement true.
       I, in turn, enlarge the universe by admitting finite intermediaries between the two original facts. Caesar HAD, and my statement HAS, effects; and if these effects in any way run together, a concrete medium and bottom is provided for the determinate cognitive relation, which, as a pure ACTIO IN DISTANS, seemed to float too vaguely and unintelligibly.
       The real Caesar, for example, wrote a manuscript of which I see a real reprint, and say 'the Caesar I mean is the author of THAT.' The workings of my thought thus determine both its denotative and its connotative significance more fully. It now defines itself as neither irrelevant to the real Caesar, nor false in what it suggests of him. The absolute mind, seeing me thus working towards Caesar through the cosmic intermediaries, might well say: 'Such workings only specify in detail what I meant myself by the statement being true. I decree the cognitive relation between the two original facts to mean that just that kind of concrete chain of intermediaries exists or can exist.'
       But the chain involves facts prior to the statement the logical conditions of whose truth we are defining, and facts subsequent to it; and this circumstance, coupled with the vulgar employment of the terms truth and fact as synonyms, has laid my account open to misapprehension. 'How,' it is confusedly asked, 'can Caesar's existence, a truth already 2000 years old, depend for its truth on anything about to happen now? How can my acknowledgment of it be made true by the acknowledgment's own effects? The effects may indeed confirm my belief, but the belief was made true already by the fact that Caesar really did exist.'
       Well, be it so, for if there were no Caesar, there could, of course, be no positive truth about him--but then distinguish between 'true' as being positively and completely so established, and 'true' as being so only 'practically,' elliptically, and by courtesy, in the sense of not being positively irrelevant or UNtrue. Remember also that Caesar's having existed in fact may make a present statement false or irrelevant as well as it may make it true, and that in neither case does it itself have to alter. It being given, whether truth, untruth, or irrelevancy shall be also given depends on something coming from the statement itself. What pragmatism contends for is that you cannot adequately DEFINE the something if you leave the notion of the statement's functional workings out of your account. Truth meaning agreement with reality, the mode of the agreeing is a practical problem which the subjective term of the relation alone can solve.
       NOTE. This paper was originally followed by a couple of paragraphs meant to conciliate the intellectualist opposition. Since you love the word 'true' so, and since you despise so the concrete working of our ideas, I said, keep the word 'truth' for the saltatory and incomprehensible relation you care so much for, and I will say of thoughts that know their objects in an intelligible sense that they are 'truthful.'
       Like most offerings, this one has been spurned, so I revoke it, repenting of my generosity. Professor Pratt, in his recent book, calls any objective state of FACTS 'a truth,' and uses the word 'trueness' in the sense of 'truth' as proposed by me. Mr. Hawtrey (see below, page 281) uses 'correctness' in the same sense. Apart from the general evil of ambiguous vocabularies, we may really forsake all hope, if the term 'truth' is officially to lose its status as a property of our beliefs and opinions, and become recognized as a technical synonym for 'fact.'
       [The end]
       William James's essay: Existence Of Julius Caesar
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Absolutism And Empiricism
Address At The Emerson Centenary In Concord
Circumscription Of The Topic
Conclusions (Summary Of Religious Characteristics)
Conversion
The Dilemma Of Determinism
The Divided Self, And The Process Of Its Unification
Does 'Consciousness' Exist?
The Energies Of Men
The Essence Of Humanism
The Experience Of Activity
Final Impressions Of A Psychical Researcher
Francis Boott
Frederic Myers' Services To Psychology
Great Men And Their Environment
Herbert Spencer's Autobiography
How Two Minds Can Know One Thing
Humanism And Truth Once More
The Importance Of Individuals
Is Life Worth Living?
Is Radical Empiricism Solipsistic?
Louis Agassiz
The Moral Equivalent Of War
The Moral Philosopher And The Moral Life
Mr. Pitkin's Refutation Of 'Radical Empiricism'
Mysticism
La Notion De Conscience (in French)
On Some Hegelisms
On Some Mental Effects Of The Earthquake
Other Characteristics (Aesthetic Elements In Religion)
The Ph.D. Octopus
Philosophy
The Place Of Affectional Facts In A World Of Pure Experience
A Pluralistic Mystic
The Reality Of The Unseen
Reflex Action And Theism
Religion And Neurology
The Religion Of Healthy Mindedness
Remarks At The Peace Banquet
Robert Gould Shaw
Saintliness
The Sentiment Of Rationality
The Sick Soul
The Social Value Of The College-Bred
Stanford's Ideal Destiny
The Thing And Its Relations
Thomas Davidson: A Knight-Errant Of The Intellectual Life
The True Harvard
The Value Of Saintliness
What Psychical Research Has Accomplished
The Will To Believe
A World Of Pure Experience
The _ One And The Many
_ Pragmatism And Common Sense
_ Pragmatism And Humanism
_ Pragmatism And Religion
_ Pragmatism's Conception Of Truth
The _ Present Dilemma In Philosophy
_ Some Metaphysical Problems Pragmatically Considered
_ What Pragmatism Means
The _Absolute And The Strenuous Life
_Abstractionism And 'Relativismus'
A _Dialogue
The _Essence Of Humanism
The _Existence Of Julius Caesar
The _Function Of Cognition
_Humanism And Truth
The _Meaning Of The Word Truth
The _Pragmatist Account Of Truth And Its Misunderstanders
_Preface [of 'The Meaning of Truth']
_Professor Hebert On Pragmatism
_Professor Pratt On Truth
The _Relation Between Knower And Known
The _Tigers In India
_Two English Critics
A _Word More About Truth