Naive truth and naive logical properties

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2014

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Cambridge University Press
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Zardini, E. (2014) «Naive truth and naive logical properties», Review of Symbolic Logic, 7(2), pp. 351-384. Disponible en: https://doi.org/10.1017/S1755020314000045

Abstract

A unified answer is offered to two distinct fundamental questions: whether a nonclassical solution to the semantic paradoxes should be extended to other apparently similar paradoxes (in particular, to the paradoxes of logical properties) and whether a nonclassical logic should be expressed in a nonclassical metalanguage. The paper starts by reviewing a budget of paradoxes involving the logical properties of validity, inconsistency, and compatibility. The author's favored substructural approach to naive truth is then presented and it is explained how that approach can be extended in a very natural way so as to solve a certain paradox of validity. However, three individually decisive reasons are later provided for thinking that no approach adopting a classical metalanguage can adequately account for all the features involved in the paradoxes of logical properties. Consequently, the paper undertakes the task to do better, and, building on the system already developed, introduces a theory in a nonclassical metalanguage that expresses an adequate logic of naive truth and of some naive logical properties.

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At different stages during the writing of the paper, I have benefited from a UNAM Postdoctoral Research Fellowship, from an AHRC Postdoctoral Research Fellowship, and from the FP7 Marie Curie Intra-European Research Fellowship 301493 on A Noncontractive Theory of Naive Semantic Properties: Logical Developments and Metaphysical Foundations (NTNSP), and from the FP7 Marie Curie Initial Training Network 238128 on Perspectival Thoughts and Facts (PETAF).

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