Squeezing and stretching: how vagueness can outrun borderlineness

dc.contributor.authorZardini, Elia
dc.date.accessioned2026-01-13T11:17:42Z
dc.date.available2026-01-13T11:17:42Z
dc.date.issued2006
dc.descriptionPublished: 14 July 2015.
dc.description.abstractThe paper develops a critical dialectic with respect to the nowadays dominant approach in the theory of vagueness, an approach whose main tenet is that it is in the nature of the vagueness of an expression to present borderline cases of application, conceived of as enjoying some kind of distinctive normative status. Borderlineness is used to explain the basic phenomena of vagueness, such as, for example, our ignorance of the location of cut-offs in a soritical series. Every particular theory of vagueness exemplifying the approach makes use, in the vague object language, of a definiteness operator which, however substantially interpreted, unavoidably inherits the vagueness of the expressions on which it operates (‘higher-order vagueness’). It is first argued that finite soritical series force a surprising collapse result concerning a particular set of expressions involving the definiteness operator. It is then shown that, under two highly plausible assumptions about higher-order vagueness (the existence of ‘absolutely definitely’ positive and negative cases and the ‘radical’ character of higher-order vagueness itself), the collapse result implies the inadequacy of the dominant approach as a theory of vagueness, as its main tenet can be, at best, not absolutely definitely true.
dc.description.departmentDepto. de Lógica y Filosofía Teórica
dc.description.facultyFac. de Filosofía
dc.description.refereedTRUE
dc.description.statuspub
dc.identifier.citationZardini, E. (2006) «Squeezing and stretching: How vagueness can outrun borderlineness», Proceedings of the Aristotelean Society, 106(1), pp. 421-428. Disponible en: https://doi.org/10.1111/J.1467-9264.2006.00158.X.
dc.identifier.doi10.1111/j.1467-9264.2006.00158.x
dc.identifier.essn1467-9264
dc.identifier.issn0066-7374
dc.identifier.officialurlhttps://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9264.2006.00158.x
dc.identifier.relatedurlhttps://academic.oup.com/aristotelian/article-abstract/106/1/421/1772825?redirectedFrom=fulltext
dc.identifier.relatedurlhttps://produccioncientifica.ucm.es/documentos/61fa8a57565bff40e6e7b781
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/130034
dc.issue.number1
dc.journal.titleProceedings of the Aristotelian Society
dc.language.isoeng
dc.page.final428
dc.page.initial421
dc.publisherAristotelian Society
dc.rights.accessRightsrestricted access
dc.subject.cdu1
dc.subject.cdu16
dc.subject.keywordTheory of vagueness
dc.subject.ucmFilosofía
dc.subject.ucmLógica (Filosofía)
dc.subject.unesco72 Filosofía
dc.subject.unesco11 Lógica
dc.titleSqueezing and stretching: how vagueness can outrun borderlineness
dc.typejournal article
dc.type.hasVersionVoR
dc.volume.number106
dspace.entity.typePublication
relation.isAuthorOfPublicationa4d71e69-edec-4475-a5ec-16f96f9a3b4a
relation.isAuthorOfPublication.latestForDiscoverya4d71e69-edec-4475-a5ec-16f96f9a3b4a

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