§ 1. THE THREE TASKS 11
concept say, causality, or truth, or meaning itself. Logically speaking this is a question of a decision concerning the limitation of a concept, although, of course, the practice of science has already decided about this limitation in a rather precise way. In such a case, it must be carefully examined whether the decision in question is a convention or a bifurcation. The limitation of a concept may be of a conventional character, i.e., different limitations may lead to equivalent systems.
The character of being true or false belongs to statements only, not to decisions. We can, however, co-ordinate with a decision certain statements concerning it; and, above all, there are two types of statements which must be considered. The first one is a statement of the type we have already mentioned; it states which decision science uses in practice. It belongs to descriptive epistemology and is, therefore, of a sociological character. We may say that it states an object fact, i.e., a fact belonging to the sphere of the objects of knowledge,[1] a sociological fact being of this type. It is, of course, the same type of fact with which natural science deals. The second statement concerns the fact that, logically speaking, there is a decision and not a statement; this kind of fact may be called a logical fact. There is no contradiction in speaking here of a fact concerning a decision; although a decision is not a fact, its character of being a decision is a fact and may be expressed in a statement. That becomes obvious by the cognitional character of such a statement; the statement may be right or wrong, and in some cases the wrong statement has been maintained for centuries, whereas the right statement was discovered only recently. The given examples of Helm-
- ↑ The term “objective fact” taken in the original sense of the word "objective” would express the same point; but we avoid it, as the word “objective” suggests an opposition to “subjective,” an opposition which we do not intend.