Abstract
ABSTRACT This paper deals with the linguistic phenomenon of vagueness. Based on certain observations regarding the intuitions and linguistic practices of the philosophically informed speaker, we make a series of assumptions concerning the nature and characteristics of the phenomenon. Vagueness is treated as an emerging phenomenon, caused, in essence, by the messy way in which linguistic communities reach classificatory equilibria. Any talk of ‘meaning’, ‘truth’, and such is treated as an indirect way of attempting to describe such equilibria, and it is in regard to these that ascriptions of truth are here relativised. Given such assumptions, we then proceed to formulate and study a semantic theory for languages that contain vague predicates. Finally, we describe two proof systems, one based on trees, and a natural deduction system in the style of Fitch, and outline the appropriate proofs of soundness and completeness.