ABSTRACT

The particular fact that makes a given belief true or false I call its “objective,”1 and the relation of the belief to its objective I call the “reference” or the “objective reference” of the belief. Thus, if I believe that Columbus crossed the Atlantic in 1492, the “objective” of my belief is Columbus’s actual voyage, and the “reference” of my belief is the relation between my belief and the voyage-that relation, namely, in virtue of which the voyage makes my belief true (or, in another case, false). “Reference” of beliefs differs from “meaning” of words in various ways, but especially in the fact that it is of two kinds, “true” reference and “false” reference. The truth or falsehood of a belief does not depend upon anything intrinsic to the belief, but upon the nature of its relation to its objective. The intrinsic nature of belief can be treated without reference to what makes it true or false. In the remainder of the present lecture I shall ignore truth and falsehood, which will be the subject of Lecture XIII. It is the intrinsic nature of belief that will concern us to-day.