From a Deflationary Point of View
"Deflationism" has emerged as one of the most significant developments in contemporary philosophy. It is best known as a story about truth — roughly, that the traditional search for its underlying nature is misconceived, since there can be no such thing. However, the scope of deflationism extends well beyond that particular topic. For, in the first place, such a view of truth substantially affects what we should say about neighboring concepts such as "reality," "meaning," and "rationality." And in the second place, the anti-theoretical meta-philosophy that lies behind that view — the idea that philosophical problems are characteristically based on confusion and should therefore be dissolved rather than solved — may fruitfully be applied throughout the subject, in epistemology, ethics, the philosophy of science, metaphysics, and so on.

The essays reprinted here were written over the last twenty five years. They represent Paul Horwich's development of the deflationary perspective and demonstrate its considerable power and fertility. They concern a broad array of philosophical problems: the nature of truth, realism vs. anti-realism, the creation of meaning, epistemic rationality, the conceptual role of "ought," probabilistic models of scientific reasoning, the autonomy of art, the passage of time, and the trajectory of Wittgenstein's philosophy. They appear as originally published except for the correction of obvious mistakes, the interpolation of clarifying material, and the inclusion of new footnotes to indicate Horwich's subsequent directions of thought.
1100993732
From a Deflationary Point of View
"Deflationism" has emerged as one of the most significant developments in contemporary philosophy. It is best known as a story about truth — roughly, that the traditional search for its underlying nature is misconceived, since there can be no such thing. However, the scope of deflationism extends well beyond that particular topic. For, in the first place, such a view of truth substantially affects what we should say about neighboring concepts such as "reality," "meaning," and "rationality." And in the second place, the anti-theoretical meta-philosophy that lies behind that view — the idea that philosophical problems are characteristically based on confusion and should therefore be dissolved rather than solved — may fruitfully be applied throughout the subject, in epistemology, ethics, the philosophy of science, metaphysics, and so on.

The essays reprinted here were written over the last twenty five years. They represent Paul Horwich's development of the deflationary perspective and demonstrate its considerable power and fertility. They concern a broad array of philosophical problems: the nature of truth, realism vs. anti-realism, the creation of meaning, epistemic rationality, the conceptual role of "ought," probabilistic models of scientific reasoning, the autonomy of art, the passage of time, and the trajectory of Wittgenstein's philosophy. They appear as originally published except for the correction of obvious mistakes, the interpolation of clarifying material, and the inclusion of new footnotes to indicate Horwich's subsequent directions of thought.
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From a Deflationary Point of View

From a Deflationary Point of View

by Paul Horwich
From a Deflationary Point of View

From a Deflationary Point of View

by Paul Horwich

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Overview

"Deflationism" has emerged as one of the most significant developments in contemporary philosophy. It is best known as a story about truth — roughly, that the traditional search for its underlying nature is misconceived, since there can be no such thing. However, the scope of deflationism extends well beyond that particular topic. For, in the first place, such a view of truth substantially affects what we should say about neighboring concepts such as "reality," "meaning," and "rationality." And in the second place, the anti-theoretical meta-philosophy that lies behind that view — the idea that philosophical problems are characteristically based on confusion and should therefore be dissolved rather than solved — may fruitfully be applied throughout the subject, in epistemology, ethics, the philosophy of science, metaphysics, and so on.

The essays reprinted here were written over the last twenty five years. They represent Paul Horwich's development of the deflationary perspective and demonstrate its considerable power and fertility. They concern a broad array of philosophical problems: the nature of truth, realism vs. anti-realism, the creation of meaning, epistemic rationality, the conceptual role of "ought," probabilistic models of scientific reasoning, the autonomy of art, the passage of time, and the trajectory of Wittgenstein's philosophy. They appear as originally published except for the correction of obvious mistakes, the interpolation of clarifying material, and the inclusion of new footnotes to indicate Horwich's subsequent directions of thought.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780199251278
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 04/14/2005
Pages: 184
Product dimensions: 8.50(w) x 5.50(h) x 0.56(d)

About the Author

City University of New York

Table of Contents

Introduction1. Three Forms of Realism (1982)2. Realism and Truth (1996)3. How to Choose between Empirically Indistinguishable Theories (1982)4. Meaning, Use, and Truth (1995)5. The Nature and Norms of Theoretical Commitment (1991)6. Wittgensteinian Bayesianism (1993)7. Deflating the Direction of Time (1993)8. Gibbard's Theory of Norms (1993)9. Science and Art (2001)10. Wittgenstein's Meta-philosophical Development (2004)Index
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