In this critical study I first summarize Crispin Wright's "Truth and Objectivity". Wright maintains (1) that truth- aptness of a given discourse is neutral about questions of realism and anti- realism concerning the discourse, but also (2) that such metaphysical questions largely turn on discourse- specific constraints governing the truth- predicate. I urge a distinction between (i) Wright's general approach to truth and objectivity, and (ii) his apparent inclination to implement and the approach by construing truth as a fundamentally epistemic notion. I argue against an epistemically reductive implementation, and I briefly sketch an alternative way to implement the book's core ideas.
CITATION STYLE
Horgan, T., & Anonymous. (1995). Wright’s Truth and Objectivity. Nous, 29(1), 127–138.
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