I like how you’ve put this. This is roughly how I see things, and what I thought was intended by The Simple Truth, but recently someone pointed me to a post where Eliezer seems to endorse the correspondence theory instead of the thing you said (which I’m tempted to classify as a pragmatist theory of truth, but it doesn’t matter).
My point is that the role of map/territory distinction is not specifically to illustrate the correspondence theory of truth. I don’t see how the linked post disagrees with what I said, as its subject matter is truth (among other things), and I didn’t talk about truth, instead I said some apparently true things about the process of forming beliefs and decisions, as seen “from the outside”. If we then mark the beliefs that correspond to territory, those fulfilling their epistemic role, as “true”, correspondence theory of truth naturally follows.
I like how you’ve put this. This is roughly how I see things, and what I thought was intended by The Simple Truth, but recently someone pointed me to a post where Eliezer seems to endorse the correspondence theory instead of the thing you said (which I’m tempted to classify as a pragmatist theory of truth, but it doesn’t matter).
My point is that the role of map/territory distinction is not specifically to illustrate the correspondence theory of truth. I don’t see how the linked post disagrees with what I said, as its subject matter is truth (among other things), and I didn’t talk about truth, instead I said some apparently true things about the process of forming beliefs and decisions, as seen “from the outside”. If we then mark the beliefs that correspond to territory, those fulfilling their epistemic role, as “true”, correspondence theory of truth naturally follows.