Preface
Summary
This book has four parts. In the first part I sketch some mathematical preliminaries, fix notational conventions, and outline some motivations for studying axiomatic theories of truth. Deeper philosophical investigation, however, is postponed to the last part when the significance of the formal results is discussed. The axiomatic theories of truth and the results about them are then given in the two central parts. The first of them is devoted to typed theories, that is, to theories where the truth predicate applies provably only to sentences not containing the truth predicate. In the third part of the book I discuss type-free theories of truth and how inconsistency can be avoided without Tarski's object and metalanguage distinction. In the fourth and final part, the philosophical implications of the formal results are evaluated.
I have tried to make the book usable as a handbook of axiomatic truth theories, so that one can dip into various sections without having read all the preceding material. To this end I have also included many cross references and occasionally repeated some explanations concerning notation. It should be possible to read the final part on philosophical issues without having read the two formal parts containing the formal results. However, this last part presupposes some familiarity with the notation introduced in Chapters 5 and 6 in the first part.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Axiomatic Theories of Truth , pp. viii - xPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011