The liar : an essay on truth and circularity
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The liar : an essay on truth and circularity
(Oxford paperbacks)
Oxford University Press, 1989
- : pbk
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Note
Bibliography: p. [179]-180
Includes index
"First published in 1987 by Oxford University Press, ... First issued as an Oxford University Press paperback, 1989" -- t.p. verso
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This monograph purports to provide a solution to semantical paradoxes like the Liar. The authors base this solution on J. L. Austin's idea of truth, which is fundamental to situation semantics. They compare two models of language, propositions and truth, one based on Russell and the other on Austin, as they bear on the Liar Paradox. In Russell's view, a sentence expresses a proposition, which is true or not. According to Austin, however, there is always a
contextual parameter - the situation the sentence is about - that comes between the sentence and proposition. The Austinian perspective proves to have fruitful applications to the analysis of semantic paradox. The authors show that, on this account, the liar is a genuine diagonal argument. This argument
can be shown to have profound consequences for our understanding of some of the most basic semantical mechanisms at work in our language.
Jon Barwise is, with John Perry, a co-founder of the Centre for the Study of Language and Information at Stanford.
Table of Contents
- INTRODUCTION: The Liar
- Sentences, statements, and Propositions
- The universe of hypersets
- RUSSELLIAN PROPOSITIONS AND THE LIAR: Modeling Russellian propositions
- Truth of Russellian propositions
- Consequences of the Russellian account
- Sentences and Russellian propositions
- AUSTINIAN PROPOSITIONS AND THE LIAR: Modeling Austinian propositions
- Austinian propositions and the world
- An Austinian semantics
- Relating the Russellian and Austinian accounts
- Negation and denial
- Conclusions
- Bibliography
- Index.
by "Nielsen BookData"