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Syntax
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I want to explore Deflationary Theory of truth if anyone is up to it. But first, I will ask the question, “What is Truth”? As a Catholic, I believe that Truth=Christ. But to secular philosophers, this identity statement is senseless. I will grant this for the sake of argument since I want to explore the further implications of this philosophical notion with respect to philosophical inquiry in general because the philosophical notion of Truth itself has come under such attack in 20 century philosophy by *deflationary theorists *and pragmatists who will deny that the notion has any value whatsoever–whether epistemic, moral, or metaphysical. I do not intend for this thread to be epistemic, moral, or metaphsyical in scope, but only about what *Truth itself *is, what a proper theory of truth would look like, and the essential role that Truth plays in all these other areas of inquiry. The task is not daunting whatsoever because any theory of Truth will be incredibly simple since not much can be said about the notion itself to begin with.
I find exploring these questions essential for understanding the importance of the notion of Truth in a world today swamped by epistemic relativisim, secularism, and moral subjectivism. For if one does not have any kind of basic understanding of this notion, what use are any of his or her investigations into the nature of the world? The notion of ruth is foundational to the study of epistemology, morality, and metaphysics without which all these areas of inquiry become just as impossible as they become meaningless. So we have to start somewhere.
Before adding any of my own personal thoughts about the current philosophical landscape, I will introduce a 2 types of Truth-Skepticism and 2 types of non-Truth-Skepticism, all four of which are prevalent today:
Pragmatism–denies that truth is epistemically guiding at all. Excluding Dewey and James, the more current pragmatists such as Richard Rorty and Susan Haack will claim truth has no function or role to play in science or philosophy. So not only is the notion of “truth” indefinable, it doesn’t play any role in any other areas of discourse either.
Deflationary Theory–though there are different versions of this, it sufficient to say for now that deflationary theory says that a theory of truth is merely captured by the following equivalence relation:
Proposition “P” is true if and only if P.
It is that simple.
Correspondence Theory–Truth=what is, in fact, the case. All propositions are true in virtue of corresponding to some fact or state of affairs in the world.
Coherence Theory–Truth=what, in fact, coheres more, rather than less, with the rest of one’s beliefs. So a belief is true in virtue of cohering consistently with the set of ones other beliefs.
Many philosophers will construe “truth” as a property of propositions, sentences, or beliefs, and some will deny this because truth as a really existent property is too “metaphysically suspect.” But philosophers mostly diverge with respect to the question of what truth consists in (as listed above). Does truth consist in correspendence, coherence, or nothing at all (such as deflationary theory and modern pragmatism says)?
Personally, I side with the correspondence theory of truth. For one, it is the most intuitively and commonsensically plausible theory–more than coherence, anyways, since it offers a link to the outside world independent of whether or not my beliefs are internally self-consistent. I can also make sense of my beliefs as having objectivity with this notion that the other theories cannot account for.
Any thoughts on the matter?
I find exploring these questions essential for understanding the importance of the notion of Truth in a world today swamped by epistemic relativisim, secularism, and moral subjectivism. For if one does not have any kind of basic understanding of this notion, what use are any of his or her investigations into the nature of the world? The notion of ruth is foundational to the study of epistemology, morality, and metaphysics without which all these areas of inquiry become just as impossible as they become meaningless. So we have to start somewhere.
Before adding any of my own personal thoughts about the current philosophical landscape, I will introduce a 2 types of Truth-Skepticism and 2 types of non-Truth-Skepticism, all four of which are prevalent today:
Pragmatism–denies that truth is epistemically guiding at all. Excluding Dewey and James, the more current pragmatists such as Richard Rorty and Susan Haack will claim truth has no function or role to play in science or philosophy. So not only is the notion of “truth” indefinable, it doesn’t play any role in any other areas of discourse either.
Deflationary Theory–though there are different versions of this, it sufficient to say for now that deflationary theory says that a theory of truth is merely captured by the following equivalence relation:
Proposition “P” is true if and only if P.
It is that simple.
Correspondence Theory–Truth=what is, in fact, the case. All propositions are true in virtue of corresponding to some fact or state of affairs in the world.
Coherence Theory–Truth=what, in fact, coheres more, rather than less, with the rest of one’s beliefs. So a belief is true in virtue of cohering consistently with the set of ones other beliefs.
Many philosophers will construe “truth” as a property of propositions, sentences, or beliefs, and some will deny this because truth as a really existent property is too “metaphysically suspect.” But philosophers mostly diverge with respect to the question of what truth consists in (as listed above). Does truth consist in correspendence, coherence, or nothing at all (such as deflationary theory and modern pragmatism says)?
Personally, I side with the correspondence theory of truth. For one, it is the most intuitively and commonsensically plausible theory–more than coherence, anyways, since it offers a link to the outside world independent of whether or not my beliefs are internally self-consistent. I can also make sense of my beliefs as having objectivity with this notion that the other theories cannot account for.
Any thoughts on the matter?