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Realism and Truth
A01=Michael Devitt
Abductive reasoning
Anchoring
Anti-realism
Argument from ignorance
Argument from illusion
Author_Michael Devitt
Axiom
Begging the question
Brute fact
Category=QDTJ
Concept
Conflation
Constant conjunction
Correspondence theory of truth
Deflationary theory of truth
Direct and indirect realism
Eliminative materialism
Emotivism
Epistemology
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Explanation
Explanatory power
Falsity
Family resemblance
For All Practical Purposes
Foundationalism
Good and evil
Hand-waving
Hilary Putnam
Holism
Hypothesis
Idealism
Idealization
Inference
Instrumentalism
Methodological solipsism
Moral realism
Nominalism
Non-cognitivism
Objectivity (philosophy)
Ontology
Paradox
Philosopher
Philosophical language
Philosophical realism
Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature
Physicalism
Polemic
Principle of charity
Quasi-realism
Rationality
Reality
Reason
Relativism
Scientific realism
Scientism
Semantic dispute
Semantics
Skepticism
Solipsism
Subjectivism
Suggestion
Theory
Thought
Transcendental arguments
Truism
Truth
Truth condition
Understanding
Unobservable
Vagueness
Verificationism
Verisimilitude
Product details
- ISBN 9780691011875
- Weight: 567g
- Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
- Publication Date: 12 Jan 1997
- Publisher: Princeton University Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
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In this provocative and wide-ranging book, Michael Devitt argues for a thoroughgoing realism about the common-sense and scientific physical world, and for a correspondence notion of truth. Furthermore, he argues that, contrary to received opinion, the metaphysical question of realism is distinct from, and prior to, any semantic question about truth. The book makes incisive responses to Putnam, Dummett, van Fraassen, and other major anti-realists. The new afterword includes an extensive discussion of the metaphysics of nonfactualism, and new thoughts on the need for truth and on the determination of reference.
Michael Devitt is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Maryland. He is the author of Designation and Coming to Our Senses: A Naturalistic Program for Semantic Localism, and coauthor, with Kim Sterelny, of Language and Reality: An Introduction to the Philosophy of Language.
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