Footnotes to Plato from the foothills of the Superstition Mountains

Does Deflationism Rule Out Relativism?

DeflationThis post floats the suggestion that deflationism about truth is inconsistent with relativism about truth.  Not that one should be a deflationist.  But it would be interesting if deflationism entailed the nonrelativity of truth.

There is a sense in which deflationary theories of truth deny the very existence of truth. For what these theories deny is that anything of a unitary and substantial nature corresponds to the predicate 'true' or 'is true.' To get a feel for the issue, start with the platitude that some of the things people say are true and some of the things people say are not true. People who say that Hitler died by his own hand in the Spring of 1945 say something true, while those who say that no Jews were gassed at Auschwitz say something that is not true. Given the platitude that there are truths and untruths, classically-inclined philosophers will inquire: What is it that all and only the truths have in common in virtue of which they are truths? What is truth? What is the property of being-true? 


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3 responses to “Does Deflationism Rule Out Relativism?”

  1. Astute opponent Avatar
    Astute opponent

    So do we like deflationism now?

  2. BV Avatar
    BV

    Of course not! I am a wild-eyed inflationist about truth but also a resolute nonrelativist about truth.

  3. Londiniensis Avatar
    Londiniensis

    Well we agree on something then.

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