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Questions tagged [coherentism]

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3 votes
1 answer
35 views

When it comes to the coherence theory of truth, is it still always assumed that only assertions/propositions enter into the truth relation?

Sometimes, we do use truth-talk in such a way as makes it seem like we might be attributing truth to things that aren't assertions/descriptions/propositions/w/e. There is, for example, the phrase &...
Kristian Berry's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
72 views

Have any philosophers discussed “coherentizing” as a solution to the “paradox of analysis”?

This is largely a reference request, but supplementary explanations are welcome. I describe my thoughts on the paradox of analysis here. I recently tried to derive the form of first-order logic more ...
Julius Hamilton's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
41 views

The knowability principle and the regress-theoretic epistemic types

The generic knowability principle is that if t is some truth, then it is possible for t to be known: t → ◊Kt. If foundationalism, coherentism, infinitism, and their combinations are taken as epistemic ...
Kristian Berry's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
49 views

How do proponents of the correspondence theory of the truth respond to hypothetical counter-factuals?

The vast majority of philosophers today subscribe to the correspondence theory of the truth, that the truth is correspondence to the reality. Two other theories of the truth are the coherence theory ...
FlatAssembler's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
65 views

Is category theory an example of foundherentism?

After reading this essay about the history of type theory, I have refined my assessment of the set- vs. type-theory question in two ways. More similarly to what I was thinking before, I still ground ...
Kristian Berry's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
148 views

Second-order skepticism

Let "kS" = "It is known that S." Then kkS or k2S is a common hypothesis in epistemic logic (the full hypothesis can be stated as kS → k2S). So a second-order skeptic [SOS] at least ...
Kristian Berry's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
208 views

A "paradox" of coherentism?

This is a follow-up to a question I had about foundationalism, which seems paradoxical inasmuch as it is a thesis that has been argued for (perhaps it is just the historical argumentation that is ...
Kristian Berry's user avatar