Embracing the technicalities: Expressive completeness and revenge

Review of Symbolic Logic 9 (2):325-358 (2016)
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Abstract

The Revenge Problem threatens every approach to the semantic paradoxes that proceeds by introducing nonclassical semantic values. Given any such collection Δ of additional semantic values, one can construct a Revenge sentence:This sentence is either false or has a value in Δ.TheEmbracing Revengeview, developed independently by Roy T. Cook and Phlippe Schlenker, addresses this problem by suggesting that the class of nonclassical semantic values is indefinitely extensible, with each successive Revenge sentence introducing a new ‘pathological’ semantic value into the discourse. The view is explicitly motivated in terms of the idea that every notion thatseemsto be expressible should, if at all possible,beexpressible. Extant work on the Embracing Revenge view has failed to live up to this promise, since the formal languages developed within such work are expressively impoverished. We rectify this here by developing a much richer formal language, and semantics for that language, and we then prove an extremely powerful expressive completeness result for the system in question.

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Roy T. Cook
University of St. Andrews

Citations of this work

A Unified Theory of Truth and Paradox.Lorenzo Rossi - 2019 - Review of Symbolic Logic 12 (2):209-254.
Classical Logic is not Uniquely Characterizable.Isabella McAllister - 2022 - Journal of Philosophical Logic 51 (6):1345-1365.

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References found in this work

Outline of a theory of truth.Saul Kripke - 1975 - Journal of Philosophy 72 (19):690-716.
On some difficulties in the theory of transfinite numbers and order types.Bertrand Russell - 1905 - Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society 4 (14):29-53.
Absolute Generality.Agustín Rayo & Gabriel Uzquiano Cruz - 2009 - Critica 41 (121):67-84.
Indefinite extensibility.Timothy Williamson - 1999 - Grazer Philosophische Studien 55 (1):1-24.

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