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An undermining diagnosis of relativism about truth

  • Autores: Paul Horwich
  • Localización: Mind, ISSN-e 1460-2113, Vol. 123, Nº. 491, 2014, págs. 733-752
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • The view that the basic statements in some areas of language are never true or false absolutely, but only relative to an assessment-perspective, has been advanced by several philosophers in the last few years. This paper offers a critique of that position, understood first as a claim about our everyday concept of truth, and second as a claim about the key theoretical concept of an adequate empirical semantics. Central to this pair of critical discussions will be an argument that the appeal of truth-relativism derives from a specific misconception: namely, that our ordinary concept of absolute truth is substantive � a form of metaphysical or epistemological determination. Building on this argument, the present paper aims to undercut relativism about truth both as a purely philosophical thesis and as an approach to the science of meaning.


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