
handle: 11388/199728
After stressing how the attempt to provide a plausible account of the connection between language and the world was one of Putnam’s constant preoccupations, this article describes the four stages his thinking about the concepts of truth and reality went through. Particular attention is paid to the kinds of problems that made him abandon each stage to enter the next. The analysis highlights how all the stages but one express a general non- epistemic stance towards truth and reality—the right stance, according to Putnam, in order to develop full-blooded realism. Since the last stage combines a version of direct realism with a pluralist conception of truth, the article proceeds by focusing on Putnam’s alethic pluralism, carefully distinguishing it from alethic deflationism. Finally a suggestion is made as to where Putnam’s alethic pluralism may be placed within the constellation of current pluralist positions about truth.
Truth, realism, alethic pluralism, alethic deflationism, Hilary Putnam, Truth, alethic pluralism, alethic deflationism, realism, Hilary Putnam
Truth, realism, alethic pluralism, alethic deflationism, Hilary Putnam, Truth, alethic pluralism, alethic deflationism, realism, Hilary Putnam
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