Boolean negation and all that

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Abstract

We have seen that proofs of soundness of (Boolean) DS, EFQ and of ABS - and hence the legitimation of these inferences - can be achieved only be appealing to the very form of reasoning in question. But this by no means implies that we have to fall back on classical reasoning willy-nilly. Many logical theories can provide the relevant boot-strapping. Decision between them has, therefore, to be made on other grounds. The grounds include the many criteria familiar from the philosophy of science: theoretical integrity (e.g., paucity of ad hoc hypotheses), adequacy to the data (explaining the data of inference -all inferences, not just those chosen from consistent domains!) and so on. This paper has not attempted to address these issues in general. All it demonstrates is that the charge that a dialetheist solution to the semantic paradoxes can be maintained only by making some intelligible notion ineffable cannot be made to stick. The dialetheist has a coherent position, endorsing the T-scheme, but rejecting DS, EFQ (even Boolean DS and EFQ) and ABS. And any argument to the effect that the relevant notions are both ineffable and intelligible begs the question. The case against consistent "solutions" to the semantic paradoxes therefore remains intact. © 1990 Kluwer Academic Publishers.

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APA

Priest, G. (1990). Boolean negation and all that. Journal of Philosophical Logic, 19(2), 201–215. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00263541

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