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Informationen zum Autor J. C. Beall is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Connecticut. Bradley Armour-Garb is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Albany, SUNY Klappentext Deflationist accounts of truth are widely held in contemporary philosophy: they seek to show that truth is a dispensable concept with no metaphysical depth. However, logical paradoxes present problems for deflationists that their work has struggled to overcome. In this volume of fourteen original essays, a distinguished team of contributors explore the extent to which, if at all, deflationism can accommodate paradox. The volume will be of interest to philosophers of logic, philosophers of language, and anyone working on truth. Contributors include Bradley Armour-Garb, Jody Azzouni, JC Beall, Hartry Field, Christopher Gauker, Michael Glanzberg, Dorothy Grover, Anil Gupta, Volker Halbach, Leon Horsten, Paul Horwich, Graham Priest, Greg Restall, and Alan Weir Zusammenfassung Deflationist accounts of truth are widely held in philosophy: they seek to show that truth is a dispensable concept with no metaphysical depth. This volume of 14 essays explores the extent to which, if at all, deflationism can accommodate paradox. It is of interest to philosophers of logic, philosophers of language, and those working on truth. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction 1: JC Beall: Transparent disquotationalism 2: Hartry Field: Is the Liar sentence both true and false? 3: Graham Priest: Spiking the field artillery 4: Hartry Field: Variations on a theme by Yablo 5: Paul Horwich: A minimalist critique of Tarski on truth 6: Bradley Armour-Garb and JC Beall: Minimalism, epistemicism, and paradox 7: Greg Restall: Minimalists about truth can (and should) be epistemicists, and it helps if they are revision theorists too 8: Michael Glanzberg: Minimalism, deflationism, and paradoxes 9: Anil Gupta: Do the paradoxes pose a special problem for deflationism? 10: Christopher Gauker: Semantics for deflationists 11: Dorothy Grover: How significant is the Liar? 12: Volker Halbach and Leon Horsten: The deflationists' axioms for truth 13: Alan Weir: Naive truth and sophisticated logic 14: Jody Azzouni: Anaphorically unrestricted quantifiers and paradoxes ...