Timothy Williamson

The Philosophy of Philosophy


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that female foxes are female foxes. The suggestion may be that analytic truths require no truthmaker, unlike synthetic truths. An alternative suggestion is that analytic truths require truthmakers of a different kind from those of synthetic truths. Such suggestions are too unconstrained to be tractable for assessment. Still, two points stand out. First, they seem to conflict with general principles of truthmaker theory (in the unlikely event that such a theory is needed). For instance, what makes a disjunction true is what makes one of its disjuncts true. Thus whatever makes (2) (“Barbara is a lawyer”) true also makes both (5) and (6) true:

       (5) Barbara is a lawyer or Barbara is not a lawyer.

       (6) Barbara is a lawyer or Barbara is a doctor.

      But (5) is a simple logical truth, while (6) is a straightforward synthetic truth. Second, no connection has been provided between truth-maker theory and epistemology. Knowing a truth need not involve knowing its truthmaker; one can know (6) without knowing which disjunct is true (Barbara works in a building where only lawyers and doctors work). No account has been given as to why it should be easy from an armchair to know a truth with no truthmaker, or a truthmaker only of the special sort supposedly appropriate to analytic truths.

      Consider any non-indexical sentence s that expresses a necessarily true proposition. Necessarily, in any context, any sentence with the actual meaning of s expresses that necessary truth and is therefore true. Thus s is a modal-analytic truth, because its meaning is sufficient for truth. In that sense, it is true in virtue of meaning. But how little has been achieved in so classifying it! Nothing has been done to rule out the hypothesis that it expresses a profound metaphysical necessity about the nature of the world, knowable if at all only through arduous a posteriori investigation, for instance. No reason has been provided to regard s as “merely verbal” or “insubstantial” in a pretheoretic sense, unless one already had independent reason to regard all necessities as merely verbal or insubstantial. Similarly, mathematical truths count as modal-analytic; their so counting is by itself no reason to regard them as merely verbal or insubstantial. Indeed, for all that has been said, even “Water contains H2O” is modal-analytic, given that “water” has a different meaning as used on Twin Earth to refer to XYZ, a different substance with the same superficial appearance.

      A core of philosophical truths may indeed be modal-analytic. Some philosophers seek to articulate necessary truths without essential reliance on indexicals; if they succeed, the sentences they produce are modal-analytic. Even if contextualists are right, and key philosophical terms such as “know” shift their reference across contexts, the relevant sentences may still both express necessarily true propositions and be modal-analytic: consider “Whatever is known to be the case is the case.” The answers to philosophical questions of the forms “Is it possible that P?” and “Is it necessary that P?” will themselves express necessary truths, given the principle of the widely accepted modal logic S5 that the possible is non-contingently possible and the necessary non-contingently necessary; if the answers can be phrased in non-indexical terms, they will then be modal-analytic. But outside the envisaged core many philosophically relevant truths will not be modal-analytic, as the examples near the start of the chapter show.

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