Is there a difference between objectively true and fact?

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The discussion centers on the distinction between "objectively true" and "fact," particularly in the context of epistemology and ontology. Participants agree that while facts are events that can be falsified, objective truths satisfy specific truth conditions and are not subject to falsification. The example of E = mc² illustrates that while it is an objectively true statement, its interpretation as a fact can vary based on context and audience understanding. The conversation emphasizes the importance of context in defining these terms.

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Joseph Richard
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Good night people,
Is there a difference between these terms, I had this doubt when I was reading an article about Neil deGrasse Tyson on El País, Is there a difference between these terms?
 
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Context is everything.
 
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I read it in Portuguese: http://brasil.elpais.com/brasil/2016/06/30/ciencia/1467281442_280683.html
 
I think that this is a question that is best addressed under the headings of epistemology and ontology. I suspect this may be outside the scope of physicsforums.com.

However, a short answer (which may or may not address the OP's question) is that the terms are generally understood to have clearly and substantially different definitions. Further exploration of this issue will be left as an exercise.

diogenesNY
 
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Yes, in several ways. 1) facts are events so it depends on whether or not you view a fact as being capable of being separate from an event. One example of this may be proof theory. 2) Facts can be falsified and thus not objectively true.
 
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I think being objectively true means satisfying some specific truth conditions under which the subject matter is being discussed. Meanwhile, a fact is a conclusion expressed or stated for something that has occurred as a truth that as said is not always necessarily true.
 
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Hum ... So, E = mc² is a objectively true, here to the Earth is also a fact, and to another parts to the universe is not a objectively true, in conditions that there be more advanced civilizations than us? I ask dorries to people here if I am very ignorant in this subject.
 
Curious,
Why facts can be falsified and not truths? I thought that the true can be falsified and not facts, why?
 
I think "truths" is a misleading concept. The question to my mind is whether or not a system of information is physically instantiable. If it is, then it is subject to experiment and it is also an event.
 
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Joseph Richard said:
Hum ... So, E = mc² is a objectively true, here to the Earth is also a fact,...
If you bluntly state E = mc² as you believe that is what it is based on your physics background without any further explanation, what you state I think is more of a fact to the audience who share with you the same knowledge about the origin of the formula. And it is both objectively true and a fact if you explain why and how E = mc² though.
Off-topic: millions years ago, we swam in water, now we walk with 2 feet. That formula exists only some hundreds of years or so. Earth condition changes in the next million years or so would probably change it too. Maybe there could be another Einstein or Newton etc.
 

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