This is a concise introduction to current philosophical debates about truth. Combining philosophical and technical material, the book is organized around, but not limited to, the view known as deflationism. In clear language, Burgess and Burgess cover a wide range of issues, including the nature of truth, the status of truth-value gaps, the relationship between truth and meaning, relativism and pluralism about truth, and semantic paradoxes from Alfred Tarski to Saul Kripke and beyond. The book provides a rich picture of contemporary philosophical theorizing about truth, one that will be essential reading for philosophy students as well as philosophers specializing in other areas.
"Professors of philosophy, the authors have done a succinct and critical analysis of some theories of truth: deflationism, indeterminacy, insolubility, realism, and antirealism. . . . Throughout the volume, one can see the mathematical precision of the reasoning of the concepts presented here that could be a model for all endeavours of research into complex areas of philosophy. This book could be an inspiration for further work on truth."--Prabuddha Bharata
"Surveying an important and much-discussed field, and balancing the nature and logic-and-paradox sides of truth in an easy-to-grasp fashion, this book is a major achievement. It is easily the best first step into truth studies available, but also an excellent short review for experts. It is difficult to write clearly and convey serious ideas about truth to nonspecialists, but the authors have somehow pulled it off."--JC Beall, University of Connecticut
"This is a lively and well-written book by authors who know the field well and explain difficult ideas clearly and efficiently."--Matti Eklund, Cornell University
"Burgess and Burgess's book will be widely praised for wielding together the current approaches to truth and to paradoxes, without ceasing to be essentially introductory. Surely, this is an important achievement."--Andreas Karitzis, Metascience
"Truth is remarkably succinct. . . . Yet it covers a great amount of ground with accessible discussions of a variety of topics. . . . [I]ntelligent and provocative."--Michael P. Lynch, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews Preface xi CHAPTER ONE: Introduction 1 CHAPTER TWO: Tarski 16 CHAPTER THREE: Deflationism 33 CHAPTER FOUR: Indeterminacy 52 CHAPTER FIVE: Realism 68 CHAPTER SIX: Antirealism 83 CHAPTER SEVEN: Kripke 102 CHAPTER EIGHT: Insolubility? 116 Further Reading 135
Acknowledgments xiii
1.1 Traditional Theories 2
1.2 Contemporary Theories 4
1.3 Paradoxes 5
1.4 Plan 7
1.5 Sentences 10
1.6 Propositions 12
2.1 "Semantic" Truth 16
2.2 Object Language vs Metalanguage 18
2.3 Recursive Definition 22
2.4* Direct Definition 24
2.5* Self-Reference 28
2.6* Model Theory 29
3.1 Redundancy 34
3.2 Other Radical Theories 38
3.3 Disquotation 41
3.4 Other Moderate Theories 44
3.5 Sloganeering 47
3.6 Reference 49
4.1 Presupposition 53
4.2 Vagueness 54
4.3 Denial, Disqualification, Deviance 55
4.4 Doublespeak, Dependency, Defeatism 59
4.5 Relativity 61
4.6 Local vs Global 65
5.1 Realism vs Deflationism 68
5.2 Correspondence Theories 70
5.3 Truthmaker Theories 72
5.4 Physicalism 74
5.5 Utility 77
5.6 Normativity 79
6.1 Meaning and Truth 84
6.2 Davidsonianism 87
6.3 Dummettianism vs Davidsonianism 90
6.4 Dummettianism vs Deflationism 93
6.5 Holism 96
6.6 Pluralism 97
7.1 Kripke vs Tarski 103
7.2 The Minimum Fixed Point 105
7.3 Ungroundedness 107
7.4* The Transfinite Construction 109
7.5* Revision 112
7.6* Axiomatics 113
8.1 Paradoxical Reasoning 116
8.2 "Revenge" 118
8.3 Logical "Solutions" 120
8.4 "Paraconsistency" 123
8.5 Contextualist "Solutions" 124
8.6 Inconsistency Theories 127
Bibliography 143
Index 153