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dc.contributor.authorTaylor, Alistair
dc.date.accessioned2013-03-28
dc.date.available2013-03-28
dc.date.issued2012-01-01
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/2123/9008
dc.description.abstractThis work will discuss a recent series of public exchanges that took place between the two founding figures of neopragmatism, Richard Rorty and Hilary Putnam, regarding truth and its relation to justification. Like the classical pragmatists Peirce, James, and Dewey, both Rorty and Putnam argue that we should refrain from taking the term “true” to denote a successful correspondence between a proposition and a single, fixed, absolute reality. Given this substantial common ground, their exchanges provide a direct insight into a tension that lies right at the heart of neopragmatism. Both attempt to interpret truth as importantly related to the prospect of justification amongst peers, without simply providing a reductive definition of “true” as synonymous with “whatever happens to be the contemporary consensus.” Rorty and Putnam thus attempt to navigate an approach to the notion of truth that avoids the problems associated with “absolute” theories of truth on one extreme, and utter “relativism” about truth on the other. In this essay I will attempt to clarify the points of compatibility and points of departure between Rorty and Putnam’s views by closely examining the debates that occurred between the two.en_AU
dc.language.isoen_AUen_AU
dc.rightsThe author retains copyright of this thesisen_AU
dc.subjectRichard Rortyen_AU
dc.subjectHilary Putnamen_AU
dc.subjectNeopragmatismen_AU
dc.subjectTruthen_AU
dc.subjectEthnocentrismen_AU
dc.subjectInternal Realismen_AU
dc.titleNeo-pragmatist accounts of truth: Rorty's "ethnocentrism" and Putnam's "internal realism"en_AU
dc.typeThesis, Honoursen_AU
dc.contributor.departmentDepartment of Philosophyen_AU


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