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Vagueness and Contradiction
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Vagueness and Contradiction

Book Details

Format Paperback / Softback
ISBN-10 019927116X
ISBN-13 9780199271160
Publisher Oxford University Press
Imprint Oxford University Press
Country of Manufacture GB
Country of Publication GB
Publication Date Jun 17th, 2004
Print length 208 Pages
Weight 292 grams
Dimensions 21.70 x 14.10 x 1.40 cms
Ksh 9,350.00
Manufactured on Demand 0 in stock

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Roy Sorensen presents a lively original treatment of the ancient problem of vagueness. There may seem to be vagueness in the way the world is divided up, but Sorensen argues that the divisions are in fact sharp - it's just that we often don't know where they are, and so find this hard to believe.
Did Buddha become a fat man in one second? Is there a tallest short giraffe?Epistemicists answer ''Yes!'' They believe that any predicate that divides things divides them sharply. They solve the ancient sorites paradox by picturing vagueness as a kind of ignorance. The alternative solutions are radical. They either reject classical theorems or inference rules or reject our common sense view of what can exist. Epistemicists spare this central portion of our web of belief by challenging peripheral intuitions about the nature of language.So why is this continuation of the status quo so incredible? Why do epistemicists themselves have trouble believing their theory?In Vagueness and Contradiction Roy Sorensen traces our incredulity to linguistic norms that build upon our psychological tendencies to round off insignificant differences. These simplifying principles lead to massive inconsistency, rather like the rounding off errors of calculators with limited memory. English entitles speakers to believe each ''tolerance conditional'' such as those of the form ''If n is small, then n + 1 is small.'' The conjunction of these a priori beliefs entails absurd conditionals such as ''If 1 is small, then a billion is small.'' Since the negation of this absurdity is an a priori truth, our a priori beliefs about small numbers are jointly inconsistent. One of the tolerance conditionals, at the threshold of smallness, must be an analytic falsehood that we are compelled to regard as a tautology.Since there are infinitely many analytic sorites arguments, Sorensen concludes that we are obliged to believe infinitely many contradictions. These contradictions are not specifically detectable. They are ineliminable, like the heat from a light bulb. Although the light bulb is not designed to produce heat, the heat is inevitably produced as a side-effect of illumination. Vagueness can be avoided by representational systems that make no concession to limits of perception, or memory, or testimony. But quick and rugged representational systems, such as natural languages, will trade ''rationality'' for speed and flexibility. Roy Sorensen defends epistemicism in his own distinctive style, inventive and amusing. But he has some serious things to say about language and logic, about the way the world is and about our understanding of it.

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