Does rorty have a blindspot about truth

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Abstract

Criticisms of Rorty's view of truth are so frequent and from such sagacious sources that it is reasonable to suspect that there must be some truth in them. But what? In this paper I consider perhaps the strongest form of such criticism, Huw Price's claim that without a distinct norm of truth Rorty is unable to make sense of how someone, justified by her own lights (say, local communal standards), could improve her commitments by reference to another better informed community. My aim in the present paper is twofold: In the first place, I shall argue that Price's criticism is off-target missing the perfectionist character of the justificatory norms that are criterial for truth on Rorty's account. Secondly, I argue that Rorty's actual blindspot concerns the way in which truth figures in internal reflection upon a system of beliefs, e.g., 1st-person reflection upon one's own beliefs. But this blindspot should not blind us to the lasting insight in Rorty's resistance to Price's attempt to instrumentalize truth as if it were an isolable tool of our linguistic practices.

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APA

Macarthur, D. (2020, June 1). Does rorty have a blindspot about truth. European Journal of Pragmatism and American Philosophy. Associazione Culturale Pragma. https://doi.org/10.4000/EJPAP.1851

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