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Logic and The Open Society : revising the place of Tarski’s theory of truth within Popper’s political philosophy

Version 2 2024-06-17, 07:25
Version 1 2014-10-28, 09:18
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posted on 2024-06-17, 07:25 authored by A Naraniecki
This chapter retraces the way in which the Austrian philosopher Sir Karl Popper came to accept a Correspondence Theory of Truth from the work of the Polish logician and mathematician Alfred Tarski. It is argued that Popper’s use of Tarski’s semantic theory of truth reveals crucial insights into the fundamental characteristics of Popper’s social philosophy.  Quite deceptively, arguments based upon Tarski’s theory of truth appear implicitly throughout the text of The Open Society and Its Enemies (1945). It is then demonstrated how Popper integrated a correspondence theory of truth into a theory of the functions of communicative language that he received from Karl Bühler.

History

Alternative title

Logic and The Open Society : revising the place of Tarski’s theory of truth within Popper’s political philosophy

Chapter number

20

Pagination

257-271

ISBN-13

9781402093371

ISBN-10

1402093373

Language

eng

Publication classification

B1.1 Book chapter

Copyright notice

2009, Springer

Extent

31

Publisher

Springer

Place of publication

Dordrecht, The Netherlands

Title of book

Rethinking popper

Series

Boston studies in the philosophy of science; vol. 272

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