What truth is /:
Mark Jago offers a new metaphysical account of truth. He argues that to be true is to be made true by the existence of a suitable worldly entity. Truth arises as a relation between a proposition - the content of our sayings, thoughts, beliefs, and so on - and an entity (or entities) in the world.
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Oxford, United Kingdom :
Oxford University Press,
2018.
|
Ausgabe: | First edition. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Volltext |
Zusammenfassung: | Mark Jago offers a new metaphysical account of truth. He argues that to be true is to be made true by the existence of a suitable worldly entity. Truth arises as a relation between a proposition - the content of our sayings, thoughts, beliefs, and so on - and an entity (or entities) in the world. |
Beschreibung: | 1 online resource |
Bibliographie: | Includes bibliographical references and index. |
ISBN: | 9780192557100 0192557106 9780191862595 0191862592 |
Internformat
MARC
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a What truth is / |c Mark Jago. |
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588 | |a Online resource; title from PDF title page (EBSCO, viewed May 2, 2018). | ||
504 | |a Includes bibliographical references and index. | ||
520 | 8 | |a Mark Jago offers a new metaphysical account of truth. He argues that to be true is to be made true by the existence of a suitable worldly entity. Truth arises as a relation between a proposition - the content of our sayings, thoughts, beliefs, and so on - and an entity (or entities) in the world. | |
505 | 0 | |a Cover; What Truth Is; Copyright; Dedication; Contents; Acknowledgements; Introduction; The Nature of Truth; Which Approach: Metaphysical or Logical?; Realism and Anti-Realism; Outline of the Book; Chapter 1: Substantial or Insubstantial?; Chapter 2: Arguments for Truthmaking; Chapter 3: Truthmaker Maximalism; Chapter 4: States of Affairs; Chapter 5: Everything and Nothing; Chapter 6: Truthmaking and Grounding; Chapter 7: The Logic of Truthmaking; Chapter 8: The Nature of Propositions; Chapter 9: Dealing with Liars; Notation; I: Truth and Making True; 1: Truth: Substantial orInsubstantial? | |
505 | 8 | |a 1.1 Deflationism1.2 Deflationism with Propositions; 1.3 The Identity Problem; 1.4 Paradox; 1.5 Pluralism about Truth; 1.6 Alethic Pluralism and Generic Truth; 1.7 Going Substantial; 1.8 Chapter Summary; 2: Arguments for Truthmaking; 2.1 Why Truthmaking?; 2.2 Catching Cheats; 2.3 Grounding; 2.4 From Ways to Properties; 2.5 States of Affairs; 2.6 States of Affairs as Truthmakers; 2.7 Truth as Truthmaking; 2.8 Chapter Summary; 3: Truthmaker Maximalism; 3.1 Maximalism and Non-Maximalism; 3.2 Arguments for Maximalism; 3.3 The Non-Maximalist Account; 3.4 The Maximalist Strikes Back. | |
505 | 8 | |a 3.5 Non-Maximalist Replies3.6 Maximalism Across the Board; 3.7 Chapter Summary; II: Truthmakers; 4: States of Affairs; 4.1 The Fundamental Tie Account; 4.2 The Primitivist Account; 4.3 The Mereological Account; 4.4 Comparing the Approaches; 4.5 Chapter Summary; 5: Everything and Nothing; 5.1 Maximalism and Necessitation (Again); 5.2 Maximalism with Ordinary Entities; 5.3 The Whole World; Option 4: The World, Essentially As It Is; Option 5: Truthmaker Monism; 5.4 Totality States of Affairs; 5.5 Negative States of Affairs; 5.6 The Nature of the Negative; The Fundamental Tie Account. | |
505 | 8 | |a The Primitivist AccountThe Mereological Account; 5.7 More Tough Cases; Modal Truths; Counterfactual Truths; Analytic Truths; Temporal Truths; 5.8 Chapter Summary; III: The Truthmaking Relation; 6: Truthmaking and Grounding; 6.1 Can Truthmaking Be Defined?; 6.2 Truthmaking and Necessity; 6.3 Truthmaking and Grounding; 6.4 Grounding Grounding and Grounding Truthmaking; 6.5 Reflexivity, Symmetry, Transitivity; 6.6 Chapter Summary; 7: The Logic of Truthmaking; 7.1 Truthmaker Semantics; 7.2 Truthmaking, Exact and Inexact; 7.3 Exact Truthmaking; 7.4 Exact Entailment; 7.5 Inexact Truthmaking. | |
505 | 8 | |a 7.6 Chapter SummaryIV: Propositions and Paradoxes; 8: The Nature of Propositions; 8.1 Roles for Propositions; 8.2 The Nature of Propositions; 8.3 Sets of Possible Worlds; 8.4 Structured Propositions; 8.5 Propositions as Truthmaker Conditions; 8.6 What are Merely Possible States of Affairs?; 8.7 Same-Saying and Aboutness; 8.8 Chapter Summary; 9: Dealing with Liars; 9.1 The Liar; 9.2 The Liar's Revenge; 9.3 Embracing Contradictions; 9.4 The Non-Contractive Approach; 9.5 Other Substructural Approaches; 9.6 Restricting The T-scheme; 9.7 The Undecidability Approach; 9.8 The No Proposition Approach. | |
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adam_text | |
any_adam_object | |
author | Jago, Mark |
author_GND | http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/no2014094811 |
author_facet | Jago, Mark |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Jago, Mark |
author_variant | m j mj |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | localFWS |
callnumber-first | B - Philosophy, Psychology, Religion |
callnumber-label | BD171 |
callnumber-raw | BD171 |
callnumber-search | BD171 |
callnumber-sort | BD 3171 |
callnumber-subject | BD - Speculative Philosophy |
collection | ZDB-4-EBA |
contents | Cover; What Truth Is; Copyright; Dedication; Contents; Acknowledgements; Introduction; The Nature of Truth; Which Approach: Metaphysical or Logical?; Realism and Anti-Realism; Outline of the Book; Chapter 1: Substantial or Insubstantial?; Chapter 2: Arguments for Truthmaking; Chapter 3: Truthmaker Maximalism; Chapter 4: States of Affairs; Chapter 5: Everything and Nothing; Chapter 6: Truthmaking and Grounding; Chapter 7: The Logic of Truthmaking; Chapter 8: The Nature of Propositions; Chapter 9: Dealing with Liars; Notation; I: Truth and Making True; 1: Truth: Substantial orInsubstantial? 1.1 Deflationism1.2 Deflationism with Propositions; 1.3 The Identity Problem; 1.4 Paradox; 1.5 Pluralism about Truth; 1.6 Alethic Pluralism and Generic Truth; 1.7 Going Substantial; 1.8 Chapter Summary; 2: Arguments for Truthmaking; 2.1 Why Truthmaking?; 2.2 Catching Cheats; 2.3 Grounding; 2.4 From Ways to Properties; 2.5 States of Affairs; 2.6 States of Affairs as Truthmakers; 2.7 Truth as Truthmaking; 2.8 Chapter Summary; 3: Truthmaker Maximalism; 3.1 Maximalism and Non-Maximalism; 3.2 Arguments for Maximalism; 3.3 The Non-Maximalist Account; 3.4 The Maximalist Strikes Back. 3.5 Non-Maximalist Replies3.6 Maximalism Across the Board; 3.7 Chapter Summary; II: Truthmakers; 4: States of Affairs; 4.1 The Fundamental Tie Account; 4.2 The Primitivist Account; 4.3 The Mereological Account; 4.4 Comparing the Approaches; 4.5 Chapter Summary; 5: Everything and Nothing; 5.1 Maximalism and Necessitation (Again); 5.2 Maximalism with Ordinary Entities; 5.3 The Whole World; Option 4: The World, Essentially As It Is; Option 5: Truthmaker Monism; 5.4 Totality States of Affairs; 5.5 Negative States of Affairs; 5.6 The Nature of the Negative; The Fundamental Tie Account. The Primitivist AccountThe Mereological Account; 5.7 More Tough Cases; Modal Truths; Counterfactual Truths; Analytic Truths; Temporal Truths; 5.8 Chapter Summary; III: The Truthmaking Relation; 6: Truthmaking and Grounding; 6.1 Can Truthmaking Be Defined?; 6.2 Truthmaking and Necessity; 6.3 Truthmaking and Grounding; 6.4 Grounding Grounding and Grounding Truthmaking; 6.5 Reflexivity, Symmetry, Transitivity; 6.6 Chapter Summary; 7: The Logic of Truthmaking; 7.1 Truthmaker Semantics; 7.2 Truthmaking, Exact and Inexact; 7.3 Exact Truthmaking; 7.4 Exact Entailment; 7.5 Inexact Truthmaking. 7.6 Chapter SummaryIV: Propositions and Paradoxes; 8: The Nature of Propositions; 8.1 Roles for Propositions; 8.2 The Nature of Propositions; 8.3 Sets of Possible Worlds; 8.4 Structured Propositions; 8.5 Propositions as Truthmaker Conditions; 8.6 What are Merely Possible States of Affairs?; 8.7 Same-Saying and Aboutness; 8.8 Chapter Summary; 9: Dealing with Liars; 9.1 The Liar; 9.2 The Liar's Revenge; 9.3 Embracing Contradictions; 9.4 The Non-Contractive Approach; 9.5 Other Substructural Approaches; 9.6 Restricting The T-scheme; 9.7 The Undecidability Approach; 9.8 The No Proposition Approach. |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)1032811217 |
dewey-full | 121 |
dewey-hundreds | 100 - Philosophy & psychology |
dewey-ones | 121 - Epistemology (Theory of knowledge) |
dewey-raw | 121 |
dewey-search | 121 |
dewey-sort | 3121 |
dewey-tens | 120 - Epistemology, causation, humankind |
discipline | Philosophie |
edition | First edition. |
format | Electronic eBook |
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publisher | Oxford University Press, |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Jago, Mark, author. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/no2014094811 What truth is / Mark Jago. First edition. Oxford, United Kingdom : Oxford University Press, 2018. 1 online resource text txt rdacontent computer c rdamedia online resource cr rdacarrier Online resource; title from PDF title page (EBSCO, viewed May 2, 2018). Includes bibliographical references and index. Mark Jago offers a new metaphysical account of truth. He argues that to be true is to be made true by the existence of a suitable worldly entity. Truth arises as a relation between a proposition - the content of our sayings, thoughts, beliefs, and so on - and an entity (or entities) in the world. Cover; What Truth Is; Copyright; Dedication; Contents; Acknowledgements; Introduction; The Nature of Truth; Which Approach: Metaphysical or Logical?; Realism and Anti-Realism; Outline of the Book; Chapter 1: Substantial or Insubstantial?; Chapter 2: Arguments for Truthmaking; Chapter 3: Truthmaker Maximalism; Chapter 4: States of Affairs; Chapter 5: Everything and Nothing; Chapter 6: Truthmaking and Grounding; Chapter 7: The Logic of Truthmaking; Chapter 8: The Nature of Propositions; Chapter 9: Dealing with Liars; Notation; I: Truth and Making True; 1: Truth: Substantial orInsubstantial? 1.1 Deflationism1.2 Deflationism with Propositions; 1.3 The Identity Problem; 1.4 Paradox; 1.5 Pluralism about Truth; 1.6 Alethic Pluralism and Generic Truth; 1.7 Going Substantial; 1.8 Chapter Summary; 2: Arguments for Truthmaking; 2.1 Why Truthmaking?; 2.2 Catching Cheats; 2.3 Grounding; 2.4 From Ways to Properties; 2.5 States of Affairs; 2.6 States of Affairs as Truthmakers; 2.7 Truth as Truthmaking; 2.8 Chapter Summary; 3: Truthmaker Maximalism; 3.1 Maximalism and Non-Maximalism; 3.2 Arguments for Maximalism; 3.3 The Non-Maximalist Account; 3.4 The Maximalist Strikes Back. 3.5 Non-Maximalist Replies3.6 Maximalism Across the Board; 3.7 Chapter Summary; II: Truthmakers; 4: States of Affairs; 4.1 The Fundamental Tie Account; 4.2 The Primitivist Account; 4.3 The Mereological Account; 4.4 Comparing the Approaches; 4.5 Chapter Summary; 5: Everything and Nothing; 5.1 Maximalism and Necessitation (Again); 5.2 Maximalism with Ordinary Entities; 5.3 The Whole World; Option 4: The World, Essentially As It Is; Option 5: Truthmaker Monism; 5.4 Totality States of Affairs; 5.5 Negative States of Affairs; 5.6 The Nature of the Negative; The Fundamental Tie Account. The Primitivist AccountThe Mereological Account; 5.7 More Tough Cases; Modal Truths; Counterfactual Truths; Analytic Truths; Temporal Truths; 5.8 Chapter Summary; III: The Truthmaking Relation; 6: Truthmaking and Grounding; 6.1 Can Truthmaking Be Defined?; 6.2 Truthmaking and Necessity; 6.3 Truthmaking and Grounding; 6.4 Grounding Grounding and Grounding Truthmaking; 6.5 Reflexivity, Symmetry, Transitivity; 6.6 Chapter Summary; 7: The Logic of Truthmaking; 7.1 Truthmaker Semantics; 7.2 Truthmaking, Exact and Inexact; 7.3 Exact Truthmaking; 7.4 Exact Entailment; 7.5 Inexact Truthmaking. 7.6 Chapter SummaryIV: Propositions and Paradoxes; 8: The Nature of Propositions; 8.1 Roles for Propositions; 8.2 The Nature of Propositions; 8.3 Sets of Possible Worlds; 8.4 Structured Propositions; 8.5 Propositions as Truthmaker Conditions; 8.6 What are Merely Possible States of Affairs?; 8.7 Same-Saying and Aboutness; 8.8 Chapter Summary; 9: Dealing with Liars; 9.1 The Liar; 9.2 The Liar's Revenge; 9.3 Embracing Contradictions; 9.4 The Non-Contractive Approach; 9.5 Other Substructural Approaches; 9.6 Restricting The T-scheme; 9.7 The Undecidability Approach; 9.8 The No Proposition Approach. Truth. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85138279 Vérité. truth. aat PHILOSOPHY Epistemology. bisacsh Truth fast has work: What truth is (Text) https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PCFv8Dx8QqqVtJH94v7ckQm https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/ontology/hasWork Print version: JAGO, MARK. WHAT TRUTH IS. [Place of publication not identified] : OXFORD UNIV PRESS, 2018 0198823819 (OCoLC)1015242970 FWS01 ZDB-4-EBA FWS_PDA_EBA https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=1800471 Volltext |
spellingShingle | Jago, Mark What truth is / Cover; What Truth Is; Copyright; Dedication; Contents; Acknowledgements; Introduction; The Nature of Truth; Which Approach: Metaphysical or Logical?; Realism and Anti-Realism; Outline of the Book; Chapter 1: Substantial or Insubstantial?; Chapter 2: Arguments for Truthmaking; Chapter 3: Truthmaker Maximalism; Chapter 4: States of Affairs; Chapter 5: Everything and Nothing; Chapter 6: Truthmaking and Grounding; Chapter 7: The Logic of Truthmaking; Chapter 8: The Nature of Propositions; Chapter 9: Dealing with Liars; Notation; I: Truth and Making True; 1: Truth: Substantial orInsubstantial? 1.1 Deflationism1.2 Deflationism with Propositions; 1.3 The Identity Problem; 1.4 Paradox; 1.5 Pluralism about Truth; 1.6 Alethic Pluralism and Generic Truth; 1.7 Going Substantial; 1.8 Chapter Summary; 2: Arguments for Truthmaking; 2.1 Why Truthmaking?; 2.2 Catching Cheats; 2.3 Grounding; 2.4 From Ways to Properties; 2.5 States of Affairs; 2.6 States of Affairs as Truthmakers; 2.7 Truth as Truthmaking; 2.8 Chapter Summary; 3: Truthmaker Maximalism; 3.1 Maximalism and Non-Maximalism; 3.2 Arguments for Maximalism; 3.3 The Non-Maximalist Account; 3.4 The Maximalist Strikes Back. 3.5 Non-Maximalist Replies3.6 Maximalism Across the Board; 3.7 Chapter Summary; II: Truthmakers; 4: States of Affairs; 4.1 The Fundamental Tie Account; 4.2 The Primitivist Account; 4.3 The Mereological Account; 4.4 Comparing the Approaches; 4.5 Chapter Summary; 5: Everything and Nothing; 5.1 Maximalism and Necessitation (Again); 5.2 Maximalism with Ordinary Entities; 5.3 The Whole World; Option 4: The World, Essentially As It Is; Option 5: Truthmaker Monism; 5.4 Totality States of Affairs; 5.5 Negative States of Affairs; 5.6 The Nature of the Negative; The Fundamental Tie Account. The Primitivist AccountThe Mereological Account; 5.7 More Tough Cases; Modal Truths; Counterfactual Truths; Analytic Truths; Temporal Truths; 5.8 Chapter Summary; III: The Truthmaking Relation; 6: Truthmaking and Grounding; 6.1 Can Truthmaking Be Defined?; 6.2 Truthmaking and Necessity; 6.3 Truthmaking and Grounding; 6.4 Grounding Grounding and Grounding Truthmaking; 6.5 Reflexivity, Symmetry, Transitivity; 6.6 Chapter Summary; 7: The Logic of Truthmaking; 7.1 Truthmaker Semantics; 7.2 Truthmaking, Exact and Inexact; 7.3 Exact Truthmaking; 7.4 Exact Entailment; 7.5 Inexact Truthmaking. 7.6 Chapter SummaryIV: Propositions and Paradoxes; 8: The Nature of Propositions; 8.1 Roles for Propositions; 8.2 The Nature of Propositions; 8.3 Sets of Possible Worlds; 8.4 Structured Propositions; 8.5 Propositions as Truthmaker Conditions; 8.6 What are Merely Possible States of Affairs?; 8.7 Same-Saying and Aboutness; 8.8 Chapter Summary; 9: Dealing with Liars; 9.1 The Liar; 9.2 The Liar's Revenge; 9.3 Embracing Contradictions; 9.4 The Non-Contractive Approach; 9.5 Other Substructural Approaches; 9.6 Restricting The T-scheme; 9.7 The Undecidability Approach; 9.8 The No Proposition Approach. Truth. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85138279 Vérité. truth. aat PHILOSOPHY Epistemology. bisacsh Truth fast |
subject_GND | http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85138279 |
title | What truth is / |
title_auth | What truth is / |
title_exact_search | What truth is / |
title_full | What truth is / Mark Jago. |
title_fullStr | What truth is / Mark Jago. |
title_full_unstemmed | What truth is / Mark Jago. |
title_short | What truth is / |
title_sort | what truth is |
topic | Truth. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85138279 Vérité. truth. aat PHILOSOPHY Epistemology. bisacsh Truth fast |
topic_facet | Truth. Vérité. truth. PHILOSOPHY Epistemology. Truth |
url | https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=1800471 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT jagomark whattruthis |