72 min listen
Arianna Betti, “Against Facts” (MIT Press, 2015)
Arianna Betti, “Against Facts” (MIT Press, 2015)
ratings:
Length:
66 minutes
Released:
Jul 15, 2016
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
The British philosopher and logician Bertrand Russell claimed it is a truism that there are facts: the planets revolve around the sun, 2 + 2 = 4, elephants are bigger than mice. In Against Facts (MIT Press, 2015), Arianna Betti argues that not only is it not a truism that there are facts, but that on either of the basic views of what facts are, there aren’t any. Betti, who is professor of philosophy at the University of Amsterdam, argues that we don’t need to posit facts as truthmakers or as the referents of that-clauses we can express truths about the world and provide an adequate semantics without needing recourse to special entities called “facts”. Betti’s finely articulated discussion and rebuttal of defenses of facts by Russell, David Armstrong, Kit Fine, and others will be a main resource for debate about facts, and related notions of propositions and states of affairs, for years to come.
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Released:
Jul 15, 2016
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
Charlotte Witt, “The Metaphysics of Gender” (Oxford University Press, 2011): Is your gender essential to who you are? If you were a man instead of a woman, or vice versa, would you be a different person? In her new bookThe Metaphysics of Gender (Oxford University Press, 2011), Charlotte Witt found that most people answered that... by New Books in Philosophy