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Charles Peirce's limit concept of truth

conference contribution
posted on 2014-01-01, 00:00 authored by Cathy LeggCathy Legg
This talk will present and explore Charles Peirce’s account of truth as “the opinion which is fated to be agreed to by all who investigate”. This account is arguably more objectivist than accounts of truth in terms of ‘usefulness’ found in other pragmatists such as William James and Richard Rorty. The account will be defended from three objections: i) Because it talks about a potentially infinite process of inquiry, it is incoherent. ii) Because it relies on a faith that inquirers will converge on one opinion if they inquire long and hard enough, it is too realist. iii) Because it defines truth as a kind of opinion, it is not realist enough.

History

Pagination

1-30

Location

Hamilton, New Zealand

Start date

2014-11-22

End date

2014-11-25

Language

eng

Publication classification

EN.1 Other conference paper

Title of proceedings

PESA 2014 : Proceedings of the 44th Annual Philosophy of Education Society of Australasia Conference

Event

Philosophy of Education Society of Australasia. Conference (2014 : Hamilton, New Zealand)

Publisher

PESA

Place of publication

Hamilton, New Zealand

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