Three-Valued Plurivaluationism: A Reply to Williamson's Criticisms on the Three-Valued Approach to the Sorites Paradox
In the past 40 years, philosophers have proposed a large number of solutions to the sorites paradox, aiming at both pinpointing the problem(s) of these arguments and giving a plausible explanation of why we are taken in by them. However, one kind of these solutions, namely, the three-valued solution...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Philosophical forum 2016-09, Vol.47 (3-4), p.341-360 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | In the past 40 years, philosophers have proposed a large number of solutions to the sorites paradox, aiming at both pinpointing the problem(s) of these arguments and giving a plausible explanation of why we are taken in by them. However, one kind of these solutions, namely, the three-valued solutions, has often been thought to be implausible. There are two main objections to the three-valued approach to vagueness in the literature. One of them focuses on the fact that the approach is truth-functional and thereby cannot do justice to the phenomenon of penumbral connection. The other objection is that the three-valued approach falls foul of "the problem of higher-order vagueness" by imposing sharp cut-off points on a sorites series where there should be none. Since the second one it often thought to be more serious than the first one, I will elaborate on it first. |
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ISSN: | 0031-806X 1467-9191 |
DOI: | 10.1111/phil.12127 |