Wittgenstein's Account of Truth / Edition 1

Wittgenstein's Account of Truth / Edition 1

by Sara Ellenbogen
ISBN-10:
0791456269
ISBN-13:
9780791456262
Pub. Date:
01/30/2003
Publisher:
State University of New York Press
ISBN-10:
0791456269
ISBN-13:
9780791456262
Pub. Date:
01/30/2003
Publisher:
State University of New York Press
Wittgenstein's Account of Truth / Edition 1

Wittgenstein's Account of Truth / Edition 1

by Sara Ellenbogen

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Overview

Wittgenstein's Account of Truth challenges the view that semantic antirealists attribute to Wittgenstein: that we cannot meaningfully call verification-transcendent statements "true." Ellenbogen argues that Wittgenstein would not have held that we should revise our practice of treating certain statements as true or false, but instead would have held that we should revise our view of what it means to call a statement true. According to the dictum "meaning is use," what makes it correct to call a statement "true" is not its correspondence with how things are, but our criterion for determining its truth. What it means for us to call a statement "true" is that we currently judge it true, knowing that we may some day revise the criteria whereby we do so.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780791456262
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Publication date: 01/30/2003
Series: SUNY series in Philosophy
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 164
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Sara Ellenbogen is a visiting scholar at Boston University.

Table of Contents

Abbreviations

Preface

Acknowledgments

PART I. FROM "MEANING IS USE" TO THE REJECTION OF TRANSCENDENT TRUTH

1. Wittgenstein's Rejection of Realism versus Semantic Antirealism

2. The Positive Account of Truth

3. Antirealism Revisited

PART II. FROM "MEANING IS USE" TO SEMANTIC ANTIREALISM

4. The Acquisition Argument and the Manifestation Criterion

5. Antirealism Presupposes Realism

6. Tensions Between Wittgenstein and Dummett

7. Semantic Antirealism Is Inconsistent

PART III. WHY A REVISIONIST ACCOUNT OF TRUTH?

8. Criteria and Justification Conditions

9. Criteria and Realist Truth Conditions

10. Why Criteria Are Not Defeasible

11. Criterial Change, Conceptual Change, and Their Implications for the Concept of Truth

12. Why a Revisionist Account of Truth?

Notes

Bibliography

Index

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