Thought and World
There is an important family of semantic notions that we apply to thoughts and to the conceptual constituents of thoughts - as when we say that the thought that the Universe is expanding is true. Thought and World presents a theory of the content of such notions. The theory is largely deflationary in spirit, in the sense that it represents a broad range of semantic notions - including the concept of truth - as being entirely free from substantive metaphysical and empirical presuppositions. At the same time, however, it takes seriously and seeks to explain the intuition that there is a metaphysically or empirically 'deep' relation (a relation of mirroring or semantic correspondence) linking thoughts to reality. Thus, the theory represents a kind of compromise between deflationism and versions of the correspondence theory of truth. This book will appeal to students and professionals interested in the philosophy of logic and language.
- Gives a novel, detailed account of substitutional quantification
- The clear, uncluttered presentation and elegant style make it ideal for use in graduate courses
- Presents a new deflationary account of truth
Reviews & endorsements
'Hill's excellent Thought and World is a highly readable and important defence of a form of deflationism … it deserves, and will no dout receive, careful study.' The Philosophical Quarterly
Product details
November 2002Paperback
9780521892438
170 pages
229 × 152 × 10 mm
0.276kg
Available
Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Truth in the realm of thoughts
- 3. The marriage of heaven and hell: reconciling deflationary semantics with correspondence intuitions
- 4. Indexical representation and deflationary semantics
- 5. Why meaning matters
- 6. Into the wild blue yonder: non-designating concepts, vagueness, semantic paradox, and logical paradox.