Neither of those describes truth nihilism. Look at the section I quoted from Soames' book above. That's one form of truth nihilism. — Mongrel
The Deflationary Theory of Truth - The deflationary theory has gone by many different names, including at least the following: the redundancy theory, the disappearance theory, the no-truth theory, the disquotational theory, and the minimalist theory. And it's not skepticism, as the redundancy theorist can happily accept that it is true that it is raining – which is just a redundant way of saying that they accept that it is raining. — Michael
Isn't this like asking what "set" means in the general, not in the particular, and being unable to offer the same meaning for "set" in the examples of:
1. Andy Murray won every set
2. He set the table
3. The set of all odd numbers has the same cardinality as the set of all even numbers
4. The Sun set at 8:00pm. — Michael
Your example offers 4 entirely different uses of the term "set," where there's clearly a similarity in the way I used "truth." In each instance, I used "truth" to reference the accuracy of the statement, although the accuracy of each statement was measured differently in each statement, or, as Banno pointed out, it was the justification that varied. — Hanover
Yes. Think about moral nihilsm. No change in language use is required. — Mongrel
When an assertion can be found true in more than one metaphysics, and whose interpretation is more unambiguously framed, then it may be considered to possess greater merit. Hence, in modern metaphysics, the merit of an assertion is considered more fruitful to consider than the truth of a proposition.
A note on redundancy.
While "It is true that it is raining" means no more than "It is raining", falsehood does not work the same way at all.
"It is false that it is raining" means "it is not raining".
Truth may be redundant, but falsehood is not. — unenlightened
So for example if we want to know who smashed the vase, and we're interrogating someone who we think knows, we might say 'tell me the truth,' — The Great Whatever
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