Repository | Book | Chapter

224174

(1991) On truth, Dordrecht, Springer.

The nature of truth

Frank P. Ramsey, Nicholas Rescher, Ulrich Majer

pp. 6-24

What is truth? What character is it that we ascribe to an opinion or a statement when we call it "true"? This is our first question, but before trying to answer it let us reflect for a moment on what it means. For we must distinguish one question, "what is truth?", from the quite different question "what is true?" If a man asked what was true, the sort of answer he might hope for would either be as complete an enumeration as possible of all truths, i.e., an encyclopaedia, or else a test or criterion of truth, a method by which he could know a truth from a falsehood. But what we are asking for is neither of these things, but something much more modest; we do not hope to learn an infallible means of distinguishing truth from falsehood but simply to know what it is that this word "true" means. It is a word which we all understand, but if we try to explain it, we can easily get involved, as the history of philosophy shows, in a maze of confusion.1

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-011-3738-6_2

Full citation:

Ramsey, F.P. , Rescher, N. , Majer, U. (1991). The nature of truth, in On truth, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 6-24.

This document is unfortunately not available for download at the moment.