234340

(2018) Synthese 195 (10).

Three-valued semantic pluralism

a defense of a three-valued solution to the sorites paradox

Wen-fang Wang

pp. 4441-4476

Disagreeing with most authors on vagueness, the author proposes a solution that he calls ‘three-valued semantic pluralism’ to the age-old sorites paradox. In essence, it is a three-valued semantics for a first-order vague language with identity with the additional suggestion that a vague language has more than one correct interpretation. Unlike the traditional three-valued approach to a vague language, three-valued semantic pluralism can accommodate the phenomenon of higher-order vagueness and the phenomenon of penumbral connection when equipped with ‘suitable conditionals’. The author also shows that three-valued semantic pluralism is a natural consequence of a restricted form of the Tolerance principle ((hbox {T}_R)) and a few related ideas, and argues that ((hbox {T}_R)) is well-motivated by considerations about how we learn, teach, and use vague predicates.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/s11229-017-1517-6

Full citation:

Wang, W. (2018). Three-valued semantic pluralism: a defense of a three-valued solution to the sorites paradox. Synthese 195 (10), pp. 4441-4476.

This document is unfortunately not available for download at the moment.