DEWEY AND RORTY ON TRUTH
Alexander Kremer
E-mail: alexanderkremer2000@yahoo.com
1. Truth in the history of philosophy
Truth is one of the most central and largest subjects in philosophy. Truth has been a topic
of ongoing discussion for thousands of years. Much of the contemporary literature on
truth shows that the most significant theories are the correspondence, coherence and
pragmatist theories of truth.
However, despite the theories, my answer to the question, ‘What is truth at all?’ is
that I do not know.
More exactly speaking, I know that in choosing a definition of truth I have
already chosen an ontology. I am persuaded that it is worth following this methodological
track for a while. According to my thesis, epistemology and ontology hang together
inseparable, especially regarding the question of truth.
The necessary and inherent connection between epistemology and ontology is
beyond question. Epistemology is always determined by the philosopher’s ontology.
Thousands of different philosophies have been born since its Greek beginnings, but in
some kind of form, in a direct or an indirect way, every philosophy addresses the
relationship between the human being and the world in general. It seems to be selfevident from the ancient Greek philosophy, through the mediaeval Christian philosophy,
to the end of the modern period. We can always find some ontology – usually in a latent
form that is without elaboration – also behind the so called contemporary philosophies.
Examples include Karl Jaspers, Jean-Paul Sartre researching first of all the individual and
its existence, Bertrand Russell, Ludwig Wittgenstein, John Austin, and even the young
Richard Rorty, researching mind and language. All based their work on an ontology
based in the same question as the first philosophers: “Who is the human being in the
world?” I am persuaded that this is the main question of philosophy, because every
philosophical theory has been produced by a finite and historical human being who, first
of all, wanted to understand himself in the world. Philosophy can be defined in several
concrete ways, but I think the essential structure of philosophical thinking does not
change. The formal structure of this thinking works not only in the traditional
metaphysical philosophies, but also in contemporary analytic and continental
philosophies. The formal structure of philosophical thinking might be regarded as the
theoretical and historical self-reflection of the human being that is the permanent
condition of existential inquiry. However, if philosophy is a permanent, theoretical selfand world-understanding and interpretation, then – drawn from its concept! – the
ontological question must be the dominant within every philosophy. The reason this is so
is that the main structure of the world and our place in the world can only be
comprehended on the basis of an ontological principle (which is always an answer to the
question: “what is the world like?”) which can be found already in the world-view of the
1
individual. This is a precondition of every form of ontology because ontology can be
expounded only from this kind of principle. I consider this ontological principle so
general that is used by every individual and human beings are mostly individuals, at least
from the time period of the Renaissance.
If we accept this relation between epistemology and ontology and look at truth as
one of the key questions of every epistemology, then it becomes clear that we cannot
speak in general about the nature of truth because it depends on the philosopher’s
ontology. The truth narrative always depends on the ontological narrative. (It is worth
here emphasizing that – in my opinion – the consistence must be required within one
philosophical narrative. This may not be the case within other narratives, as in the case of
art, religion, or politics, but these do not have necessarily philosophical content.1
If we take a look, for example at Plato’s, Hegel’s and the young Heidegger’s
philosophies, we can see this quite clearly!
1.1. Plato
As it is well-known, Plato created the so-called “two-world” ontology. He assumed the
existence of two, separate worlds. Beside our immanent world he posited a transcendent
world, the world of Forms. On the one hand Plato thought of our world as constantly
changing, with no unchangeable entities in it. On the other hand, within the transcendent
world are the Forms; the pure, spiritual generalities which never change. The material
substance wasn’t born later than the Forms, but it is determined by the later ones in the
sense of methexis which is one of the four posited connections between the two separate
worlds (these are methexis, Demiurge, immortal part of the human soul and the doctrine
of recollection or “anamnesis”).
Since the things of the immanent world are determined by and resemble the
motionless, eternal, unchanging Forms, the ultimate objects of recognition cannot be
anything else, except these Forms. However, the Forms exist in a different world from
the subject of the recognition, that’s why Plato had to posit not only the immortal part of
the soul but also its reincarnation. Hence we can say that Plato’s epistemology, the
anamnesis, obviously is determined by his ontology.
All of this also determines his concept of truth, because it is identical with the
main Form of Good. - We can say now with Spinoza: Quod erat demonstrandum.
1.2. Hegel
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, one of the main figures of the 19th century German
Idealism, created an idealistic ontology, called ‘absolute idealism’. The term allegedly
was coined by Schelling, but his contemporaries and even Hegel used it as the name of
Hegel’s own philosophy. It meant the complete identity of knower and known, but,
unlike Schelling’s philosophy of identity, only in the final stage of the World Spirit
which is Absolute Knowing. Hegel thought namely that the Absolute is a cosmic and
objective consciousness which he called World Spirit during its historical development.
1
This is one of the differences between philosophical theory and literature. Within a philosophical theory
we need a discursive consistence, and in literature we don’t need it necessarily. There can be also an
emotional consistence enough, or we don’t need it at all, if the novel or poem would like to show just the
lack of it.
2
Because this Absolute is the whole universe for Hegel, this means that nothing
can exist outside of the Absolute. All entities of nature and society – including also the
‘human being’ and his institutions – are the objectifications of the Absolute. The only
ultimate motion in the world is the self-recognition of the Absolute which is identical
with the motion of Being.
For the Absolute, as a cosmic consciousness develops according to the three main
laws of the Hegelian dialectical logic (the law of negation of negation; the law of
measurement; and the law of contradiction), it is clear that not only his epistemology but
also his logic is identical with his ontology. This is a logico-epistemologico-ontology,
where everything follows from that ontological position that the Absolute is an objective,
cosmic consciousness.
Every new step of recognition of the Absolute in Hegel’s philosophy is a new step
of its progress towards the final stage which is Absolute Knowing. At the starting point of
its development, the World Spirit exists as a being-in-itself, but gradually recognizing
itself it becomes a being-in-and-for-itself. From all of this, it follows that the true shape
in which the ultimate truth that is the truth of the Absolute exists can only be the
scientific system of such truth.2 Given his Absolute exists not only as Substance, but
equally as a Subject3, Hegel can say that:
“The True is the whole.4 But the whole is nothing other than the essence
consummating itself through its development. Of the Absolute it must be said that it
is essentially a result that only in the end is it what it truly is; and that precisely in
this consists its nature, viz. (namely) to be actual, subject, the spontaneous becoming
of itself.”5
Quod erat demonstrandum.
1.3. Heidegger
To understand well the young Heidegger’s theory of truth, we have to look over more
thoroughly his first main work, Being and Time.6 As is well-known, Being and Time is an
unfinished work. What was published and what we can use, is nothing else but the
2
Cf. Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, Phenomenology of Spirit, transl. by A. V. Miller, Delhi: Motilal
Banarsidass Publ., 1998, p. 3. (Further: Hegel’s Phenomenology.)
3
Cf. Hegel’s Phenomenology, p. 10.
4
We also could say: “the Truth is the whole” – A. Kremer.
5
Hegel’s Phenomenology, p. 14.: “That the True is actual only as system, or that Substance is essentially
Subject, is expressed in the representation of the Absolute as Spirit – the most sublime Notion and the one
which belongs to the modern age and its religion. The spiritual alone is the actual; it is essence, or that
which has being in itself; it is that which relates itself to itself and is determinate, it is other-being and
being-for-self, and in this determinateness, or in its self-externality, abides within itself; in other words, it is
in and for itself. – But this being-in-and-for-itself is at first only for us, or in itself, it is spiritual Substance.
It must also be this for itself, it must be the knowledge of the spiritual, and the knowledge of itself as Spirit,
i.e. it must be an object to itself, but just as immediately a sublated object, reflected into itself. It is for itself
only for us, in so far as its spiritual content is generated by itself. But in so far as it is also for itself for its
own self, this self-generation, the pure Notion, is for it the objective element in which it has its existence,
and it is in this way, in its existence for itself, an object reflected into itself. The Spirit that, so developed,
knows itself as Spirit is Science; Science is its actuality and the realm which it builds for itself in its own
element.”
6
Martin Heidegger, Being and Time, translated by J. Macquarrie & E. Robinson, New York: Harper &
Row, 1962. – Further: BT.
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existential analytic, namely Heidegger’s existential hermeneutics. It can be seen from the
preliminary division of the work (BT § 8.), that the train of ideas is disrupted at the very
point where the direct treatment of the question of Being should have begun. But in my
opinion, Heidegger’s existential hermeneutics – without the problem of Being – is an
independent unit of Meaning. So, Being and Time as a fundamental ontology remained a
torso, but it is not so as an existential analytic.
Nevertheless it is one of the philosophical books in the 20th century that had a
great impact on different fields of human culture. What did it make possible? Among
several reasons, probably its original theme and approach is the first cause for its
outstanding significance. Although the new "Uhrwissenschaft" ("science of origin"), that
is, Heideggerian fundamental ontology, as first questioning the meaning of Being and
seeking to overcome Husserlian transcendental phenomenology, has remained a torso,
but its starting point, first part and – according to Heidegger’s project – its final step, the
existential analytic of Dasein was completed. His existential-phenomenological approach
takes also the philosophical tradition into consideration, opens up the earlier never seen
depths of factical structure of human existence. Placing by the earlier philosophers as
orphan handled everyday life in the centre of his research; handling understanding as a
kind of Being of Dasein; transforming the traditional hermeneutical circle into an
existential circle, and interpreting the basic state of Dasein as Being-in-the-world,
Heidegger creates philosophical hermeneutics. He ceases the world-less subject of
modern philosophy and shows the original unity of the world, Dasein and "Being-in".
After writing these constitutive moments, showing them first as parts of a static structure,
he presents the dynamic of this factical existential structure in the second division of his
work. Heidegger concentrates here not on the inauthentic Dasein, but on ontological
concepts of the motion of the authentic mode of Being (Cf. BT, end of paragraph 38). He
analyzes first of all temporality and historicality, but also death and guilt.7
If we are looking for Heidegger’s epistemology, we have to realize that he doesn’t
have a particular epistemology. I could even say that he doesn’t have an epistemology at
all!! This follows from the nature of his existential phenomenology which is an ontology
and a philosophical hermeneutics at the same time. I don’t want to get lost too deeply in
the Heideggerian philosophy. However, in order to understand his theory of truth, we
7
However, Heidegger always keeps in view his original purpose: the question of the meaning of Being!
The question of Being can be raised in a proper way -- according to Heidegger -- if we understand the
authentic potentiality-for-Being-a-whole of Dasein (BT 277):
"Our existential analysis of Dasein up till now cannot lay claim to primordiality. Its fore-having never
included more than the inauthentic Being of Dasein, and of Dasein as less than a whole (als unganzes). If
the Interpretation of Dasein's Being is to become primordial, as a foundation for working out the basic
question of ontology, then it must first have brought to light existentially the Being of Dasein in its
possibilities of authenticity and totality." (BT 276)
Nevertheless, the possibility of Dasein's having an authentic potentiality-for-Being-a-whole can be made
possible only by the anticipation of death. In existential sense death cannot be regarded as a present-at-hand
"still outstanding," but death also cannot be considered as an "end," in the sense of "fulfillments," because
even "unfulfilled" Dasein ends and vice versa. Death cannot be understood as "Being-at-an-end" of Dasein,
but it is "Being-towards-the-end" ("Sein zum Tode"), that is a phenomenon. Death, in the broadest sense, is
a phenomenon of life. Death is a way to be, that Dasein takes over as soon as it comes to life. The full
existential-ontological conception of death is "Dasein's ownmost possibility -- non-relational, certain and as
such indefinite, not to be outstripped" (BT 303).
4
have to see that the philosophical hermeneutics always has a broader sense, broader
meaning than the mere epistemology, because it is a theory of our existential selfunderstanding and self-interpretation. It also means that recognition only a small part of
it, and it is derived from understanding.
Let’s summarize the hermeneutical novelty and the importance of the analyses of
Being and Time from the point of view of my topic:
- Heidegger showed that the Being of Dasein as Care, which includes existentiality,
facticity and Being-fallen, is in itself hermeneutical, because the understanding in not
only the function of intellect but basically it is a kind of Being, an existentiale. It comes
from this that the interpretation as the development of the understanding is regarded also
as essential moment of Being of Dasein. (Cf. BT §§ 31-32.)
- The existential understanding and interpretation are based on the ontological Meaning
of our Being, on the temporality (Zeitlichkeit) that in this way gives also the foundation
of the historicality of our Being. (Cf. BT § 65. and § 74.)
- It follows from the previous reasoning that all real understanding and interpretation is
historical; on the other hand it is self-understanding and self-interpretation as well;
whatever we understand, whatever we interpret, directly or indirectly we also understand
and interpret ourselves (cf. especially with BT § 4. and § 31., and TM p. 340.); thirdly,
according to Heidegger the general structure (Vor-Struktur) of the above mentioned
circle of understanding is effective not exclusively in an existential aspect, but in every
occurrence of the understanding itself.
The essence of Heidegger’s truth-theory follows from his existential ontology, and this is
the aletheia (ἀλήθεια), that is taking entities out of their hiddenness and letting them be
seen in their unhidenness (their uncoveredness).
For we can comprehend only phenomena in Heideggerian (and not in a Kantian or
Husserlian) sense that is existential-ontological meanings, Heidegger denies the
traditional correspondence theory of truth. According to his views, correspondence theory
cannot bridge the ontological gap between the judgment’s content and the thing:
“According to the general opinion, what is true is knowledge. But knowledge is
judging. In judgment one must distinguish between the judging as a Real psychical
process, and that which is judged, as an ideal content. It will be said of the latter that
it is ‘true’. The Real psychical process, however, is either present-at-hand or not.
According to this opinion, the ideal content of judgment stands in a relationship of
agreement. This relationship thus pertains to a connection between an ideal content
of judgment and the Real Thing as that which is judged about. Is this agreement Real
or ideal in its kind of Being, or neither of these? How are we to take ontologically
the relation between an ideal entity and something that is Real and present-at-hand?
Such a relation indeed subsists (bestheht); and in factical judgments it subsists not
only as a relation between the content of judgment and the Real Object, but likewise
as a relation between the ideal content and the Real act of judgment. And does it
manifestly subsist ‘more inwardly’ in this latter case?
Or is the ontological meaning of the relation between Real and ideal something
about which we must not inquire? Yet the relation is to be one which subsists. What
does such “subsisting” (Bestand) mean ontologically?
5
Why should this not be a legitimate question? Is it accidental that no headway has
been made with this problem in over two thousand years? Has the question already
been perverted in the very way it has been approached – in the ontologically
unclarified separation of the Real and the ideal?” (BT 261)
Instead of the correspondence theory Heidegger offers an existential ontological concept
of truth, and he also shows for us, how the correspondence theory originates from the
existential ontological relationships of our factical life.8
“To say that an assertion “is true” signifies that it uncovers the entity as it is in
itself. Such an assertion asserts, points out, ‘lets’ the entity ‘be seen’ in its
uncoveredness. The Being-true (truth) of the assertion must be understood as Beinguncovering. Thus truth has by no means the structure of an agreement between
knowing and the object in the sense of a likening of one entity (the subject) to
another (the object).
Being-true as Being-uncovering, is in turn ontologically possible only on the basis
of Being-in-the-world. This latter phenomenon, which we have known as a basic
state of Dasein, is the foundation for the primordial phenomenon of truth.” (BT 260261. Emphasis: A. Kremer.)
Some pages later, Heidegger goes on to say that:
“Being-true as Being-uncovering, is a way of Being for Dasein. What makes this
very uncovering possible must necessarily be called ‘true’ in a still more primordial
sense. The most primordial phenomenon of truth is first shown by the existentialontological foundations of uncovering.”9
8
Cf. Heidegger, BT 261: “Asserting is a way of Being towards the Thing itself that is. And what does one’s
perceiving of it demonstrate? Nothing else than that this Thing is the very entity which one has in mind in
one’s assertion. What comes up for confirmation is that this entity is pointed out by the Being in which the
assertion is made – which is Being towards what is put forward in the assertion; thus what is to be
confirmed is that such Being uncovers the entity towards which it is. What gets demonstrated is the Beinguncovering of the assertion. In carrying out such a demonstration, the knowing remains related solely to the
entity itself. In this entity the confirmation, as it were, gets enacted. The entity itself which one has in mind
shows itself just as it is in itself; that is to say, it shows that it, in its selfsameness, is just as it gets pointed
out in the assertion as being – just as it gets uncovered as being. Representations do not get compared,
either among themselves or in relation to the Real Thing. What is to be demonstrated is not an agreement
of knowing with its object, still less of the psychical with the physical; but neither is it an agreement
between ‘contents of consciousness’ among themselves. What is to be demonstrated is solely the Beinguncovered (Entdeckt-sein) of the entity itself – that entity in the “how” of its uncoveredness. This
uncoveredness is confirmed when that which is put forward in the assertion (namely the entity itself) shows
itself as that very same thing. “Confirmation” signifies the entity’s showing itself in its selfsameness.” (We
can say: as a phenomenon in Heideggerian sense!! – A. Kremer.)
9
Heidegger, BT 263. (“Uncovering is a way of Being for Being-in-the-world. Circumspective concern, or
even that concern in which we tarry and look at something, uncovers entities within-the-world. These
entities become that which has been uncovered. They are ‘true’ in a second sense. What is primarily ‘true’
– that is, uncovering – is Dasein. ‘Truth’ in the second sense does not mean Being-uncovering
(uncovering), but Being-uncovered (uncoveredness).” BT 263 – Emphasis: A. Kremer.)
6
I don’t want to go into the very details of the Heideggerian truth-theory, because it would
need an extra lecture, but I think we can see the point. We can see on the one hand that
Heidegger emphasizes the contextuality and situatedness of truth, and – as a consequence
of his truth-theory – he denies the absolute metaphysical truth:
“That there are ‘eternal truths’ will not be adequately proved until someone has
succeeded in demonstrating that Dasein has been and will be for all eternity. As long
as such a proof is still outstanding, this principle remains a fanciful contention which
does not gain in legitimacy from having philosophers commonly ‘believe’ it.”10
On the other hand it’s clear that his theory of truth is also determined by his existentialphenomenological ontology. – Quod erat demonstrandum.
Why should there be then a different situation in the other fields of philosophy? I am
convinced that this is the case also in the analytic tradition of philosophy that could be
demonstrated quite well for example on the changes of Wittgenstein’s ontology,
epistemology and theory of truth.
I don’t think that even the representatives of pragmatism or narrative philosophy
could handle the problem of truth in a different way! Hans-Georg Gadamer who was
Heidegger’s disciple, denied every type of metaphysical framework of the world. In
Truth and Method he expounded his own philosophical hermeneutics and insisted on the
contextuality and situatedness of truth. However, since we are speaking now on
pragmatism, let us focus on Dewey’s and Rorty’s theory of truth.
2. Dewey on Truth
As we know, the young Dewey was touched by the neo-Hegelian idealism of George
Sylvester Morris at John Hopkins University (around 1882-1884). However, during the
second Ann Arbor period of his career (1888-1894), Dewey abandoned the idea of a
supra-natural absolute spirit (around 1890-94), at the time at which his ideas about
religion became increasingly liberal. His anti-metaphysical views developed together
with his instrumentalism and naturalism, especially during his middle years (1899-1924),
when he was a philosophy professor at Columbia University in New York City. Although
he revised a little his earlier thoughts about traditional metaphysics discussed in the final
chapter of Experience and Nature (1925), but his standpoint seems to be clear. As Larry
Hickman (director of the Center for Dewey Studies) wrote in his excellent article about
Dewey:
10
BT 269-270. Beside that it is worth looking at BT 272: “Both the contention that there are ‘eternal truths’
and the jumbling together of Dasein’s phenomenally grounded ‘ideality’ with an idealized absolute subject,
belong to those residues of Christian theology within philosophical problematics which have not as yet
been radically extruded. - The Being of truth is connected primordially with Dasein. And only because
Dasein is as constituted by disclosedness (that is, by understanding), can anything like Being be
understood; only so is it possible to understand Being. - Being (not entities) is something which ‘there is’
(es gibt – A. Kremer) only in so far as truth is. And truth is (ist – A. Kremer) only in so far as and as long
as Dasein is.”
7
“Dewey’s naturalism leads him to argue that everything that is known or knowable
exists in relation to other things. There is therefore no such thing as an absolute
existence or absolute value. At the level of human life, it is the business of
communication (which Dewey terms the most wonderful of all affairs) to generate
the meanings by which natural events are enabled to pass beyond their existence as
mere occurrences and become pregnant with implications.”11
As we can see, there is not anything absolute, everything is relative and relational in
Dewey’s philosophy. That is why Dewey found the term ‘truth’ (like ‘knowledge’) a
misleading term, one that smacks of finality, certainty, and correspondence with reality.
Instead of using concepts ‘truth’, ‘belief’ and ‘knowledge’, he wrote rather about
‘warranted assertibility’ from his 1938 book, Logic: The Theory of Inquiry on:
“What has been said helps explain why the term ‘warranted assertibility’ is preferred
to the terms belief and knowledge. It is free from the ambiguity of the latter terms.”
(LW 12:16)12
As Hickman says, Dewey’s 1938 book has the reputation of being one of his most
difficult works. There can be little doubt that this attempt to refine and advance the
instrumentalist logic of his 1903 Studies in Logical Theory and his 1916 Essays in
Experimental Logic ran against the grain of received logical theory. It “treated
propositions as something to be abstracted from contexts in which inference was
attempting to move toward judgment. It treated truth pragmatically, that is as contextual
and provisional.” (Hickman, 167.) Hickman also analyzes Dewey’s new expression,
warranted assertibility:
“Dewey discarded the term “truth” because of what he considered its unfortunate
connotations. In its place he proposed “warranted assertibility.” The “warranted”
portion of the phrase points to the past, to experimental inference already
accomplished and judgments already rendered. The “assertibility” portion of the
phrase points to the future, to novel conditions and tests not yet conducted.
Warranted assertibility thus takes account of inquirential work accomplished and
asserts, provisionally, that its results are sufficiently general that they will be
applicable to future situations.” (Hickman, 167.)
11
Larry A. Hickman, ‘John Dewey, 1859-1952’, in: The Blackwell Guide to American Philosophy, Oxford:
Blackwell Publishing, 2004, 162.
12
“In the case of belief, the main ambiguity is between it as a state of mind and as what is believed–subject
-matter. In the case of knowledge, it concerns the difference between knowledge as an outcome of
“competent and controlled inquiry” and knowledge supposed to “have a meaning of its own apart from
connection with, and reference to, inquiry”.” Dewey wrote this footnote to the paragraph, when he quoted it
in 1941 in his answer to Bertrand Russell, ‘Propositions, Warranted Assertibility, and Truth’. (In The
Essential Dewey, vol. 2, ed. by Larry A. Hickman and Thomas M. Alexander, Bloomington and
Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 1998, 211.)
8
Dewey’s 1938 book, Logic was not well received, but he stuck obviously to his view in
the rest of his life. In his 1941 response to Bertrand Russell, Propositions, Warranted
Assetibility, and Truth he gave a clear summary of his standpoint:
“The position which I take, namely, that all knowledge, or warranted assertion,
depends upon inquiry and that inquiry is, truistically, connected with what is
questionable (and questioned) involves a skeptical element, or what Peirce called
“fallibilism.” But it also provides for probability, and for determination of degrees of
probability in rejecting all intrinsically dogmatic statements, where “dogmatic”
applies to any statement asserted to possess inherent self-evident truth. That the only
aleternative to ascribing to some propositions self-sufficient, self-possessed, and selfevident truth is a theory which finds the test and mark of truth in consequences of
some sort is, I hope, an acceptable view. At all events, it is a position to be kept in
mind in assessing my views. ”13
David Hildebrand evaluates the development of Dewey’s comprehension to truth in the
same way as Larry Hickman. Hildebrand quotes Dewey’s reluctant definition of truth
from his 1939 essay, Experience, Knowledge and Value: A Rejoinder and analyzes his
words:
“The ‘truth’ (of any present proposition) is, by the definition, subject to the outcome
of continued inquiries; its ‘truth’, if the word must be used, is provisional; as near
the truth as inquiry has as yet come, a matter determined not by a guess at some
future belief but by the care and pains with which inquiry has been conducted up to
the present time.” (LW14:56-7)
“Notice how Dewey’s definition directs attention back upon the process of inquiry,
the event of truth-making. Truth is a label characterizing what inquiry has come up
with – in that situation, for those purposes. But since new problems crop up all the
time, we should never expect to be finally confident about the certainty of any belief
inquiry has produced. ‘The attainment of settled beliefs’, Dewey writes, ‘is a
progressive matter; there is no belief so settled as not to be exposed to further
inquiry’ (LW12:16). If we need to honor a statement by calling it ‘true’ or
‘knowledge’, let us follow science in thinking that we honor it because it is settled
enough to be a resource for future inquiries. To say it is true that ‘Fresh bread, when
eaten, provides nourishment’ is to announce that this belief can be used reliably as a
conceptual ingredient in future inquiries. It is not a statement about the way the
world really is.
There is a function to ‘truth’ that needs to be preserved; we need to identify which
assertions have proved useful or reliable. For these reasons, Dewey begins to use
‘warrant’ or ‘warranted assertibility’ to capture the element in his theory closest to
traditional truth (or ‘knowledge’ in its honorific sense of true-belief). Saying that a
13
John Dewey, ‘Propositions, Warranted Assertibility, and Truth’, in The Essential Dewey, vol. 2, ed. by
Larry A. Hickman and Thomas M. Alexander, Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press,
1998, 203.
9
statement or proposition ‘warrants assertion’ is useful but not misleading, as it
indicates that inquires which rely on it can proceed with confidence.”14
We can summarize Dewey’s truth comprehension in a way that it was in a continuous
development, but on the one hand it always developed together with his instrumentalism
and naturalism. On the other hand it was always an organic part of his theory of
experience and inquiry:
“…my whole theory is determined by the attempt to state what conditions and
operations of inquiry warrant a “believing,” or justify its assertion as true; that
propositions, as such, are so far from being cases of believings that they are means of
attaining a warranted believing, their worth as means being determined by their
pertinency and efficacy in “satisfying” conditions that are rigorously set by the
problem they are employed to resolve.”15
As we can see from all of this, Dewey’s comprehension of truth is determined by his
version of pragmatism that is by his instrumentalism and naturalism. Quod erat
demonstrandum.
3. Rort on Truth
As is well-known Richard Rorty was an analytic thinker and only later, in the 1970s
became a neopragmatic philosopher. In contrast to the traditional foundational
philosophers, Rorty hailed first of all Dewey, Wittgenstein, Heidegger and Derrida as the
most important philosophers of the twentieth century.
According to Rorty, as we can see it also in his book of 1989, Contingency, Irony
and Solidarity16, pragmatism is an anti-essentialist, historicist constructivism, since we
create both language and truth about the world. That is why we should be constantly
interested in reconstructing language to make it more useful and rewarding and to make
our experienced world more satisfying to our desires.
He believes that the ‘supporting-pillars’ of our human existence, language, self
and community are contingent,17 and he, as every pragmatist, is also a pan-relationist. He
expounds in his article, A World – without Substances or Essences (published in 1994)
that the gap between the so-called ‘analytic’ and so-called ‘Continental’ philosophy
shows not too many signs of being bridged, although the best works being done in these
two traditions overlap to an important extent.
14
David Hildebrand, Dewey, Oxford: Oneworld, 2008, 60-61.
John Dewey, ‘Propositions, Warranted Assertibility, and Truth’, in The Essential Dewey, vol. 2, ed. by
Larry A. Hickman and Thomas M. Alexander, Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press,
1998, 208.
16
Richard Rorty, Contingency, Irony and Solidarity, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1989. –
Further: CIS.
17
“The line of thought common to Blumenberg, Nietzsche, Freud, and Davidson suggests that we try to get
to the point where we no longer worship anything, where we treat nothing as a quasi divinity, where we
treat everything – our language, our conscience, our community – as a product of time and chance.” (CIS
22.)
15
10
Additionally, Rorty claims that ‘everything is a social construction’ and ‘all
awareness is a linguistic affair’.18 Rorty draws from this not only the conclusion that it is
hopeless to get behind appearance to the intrinsic nature of reality, but he also claims that
there is no such thing as the absolute intrinsic nature at all. (Cf. ibid. 50. and 63.) The
anti-essentialists, as also Rorty is, even cannot believe that human reason would be a
special faculty for penetrating through appearances to reality. As he wrote: “We antiessentialists, of course, do not believe that there is such a faculty. Since nothing has an
intrinsic nature, neither do human beings.” (Ibid. 63)
Let us focus now on the question of his truth theory. According to my theses, (1st) Rorty’s
ontology is nothing other than his world-description; (2nd) Rorty’s truth-description can
be regarded as a special combination and improvement of some characteristics of the
pragmatist and analytic truth theories; and (3rd) Rorty’s truth-comprehension is also
determined by his ontology.
3.1. Rorty’s ontology is nothing else than his world-description
If we concentrate first on Rorty’s ontology, it follows from his above mentioned views
that he represents a kind of naturalism and nominalism. As is well-known, Rorty
regarded himself as an inheritor of Enlightenment, and the ultimate goal of his neopragmatism was to promote with philosophical arguments the new development of
human culture as the next step of the enormous plan of Enlightenment. His pragmatism
is, like its classical antecedents, itself a form of naturalism. Contrary to the
representationalist vocabularies, he regarded vocabularies that is our world- and selfdescriptions as tools, employed by natural creatures in a natural world. Different
vocabularies give us beliefs that are more or less use in coping with the environment in
various aspects. However, as Brandom says, Rorty “follows Kant in sharply
distinguishing issues of causation from issues of justification. Enforcing this distinction
between the natural and the normative (according to the lessons he learned from Sellars’
“Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind”) is what leads Rorty to insist that our
environment can at most cause us to form beliefs, not justify them. In his reliance on this
fundamental distinction, Rorty is a Kantian, even as he deploys this tool to criticize the
epistemological tradition Kant represents.”19 All of this entails that Rorty appropriates
essentially Sellar’s psychological nominalism which includes an antifoundationalist
critique of the Myth of the Given. As we have seen above, in Rorty’s opinion ‘everything
is a social construction’ and ‘all awareness is a linguistic affair’. He told me in an
interview in 2005, that “you can discuss the relation of some sentences to other sentences,
18
Rorty wants to show us the following: “Both (theory – A. Kremer) are ways of saying that we shall never
be able to step outside of language, never be able grasp reality unmediated by a linguistic description. So
both are ways of saying that we should be suspicious of the Greek distinction between appearance and
reality, and that we should try to replace it with something like the distinction between ‘less useful
description of the world’ and ‘more useful description of the world’. To say that everything is a social
construction is to say that our linguistic practices are so bound up with our other social practices that our
descriptions of nature, as well as of ourselves, will always be a function or our social needs.” (Richard
Rorty, ‘A World – without Substances or Essences’, in Philosophy and Social Hope. London-New York:
Penguin Books, 1999, 48. – Further: PSH.)
19
Rorty and his Critics, ed. by Robert B. Brandom, Oxford: Blackwell, 2004, xv. (Further: RC)
11
or that of beliefs to other beliefs, but you cannot discuss the relation between beliefs or
sentences and non-beliefs and non-sentences”.20
If we can have only a linguistically mediated world-view; if we never can step out
of it, then the next main logical consequences follow and characterize his nominalism:
1) Reality is not identical with world. It means that we can never know what
reality is in itself and in its wholeness. However, we do not even need this knowledge for
our life which is our practice in a broad sense. We are able to know only, how the world
is given to us, and how we describe ourselves within it and our relations to this world.
2) That is, why for us finite and radically timely and historical human beings, it
never cannot be proven any unchangeable intrinsic nature or Final Reality. The world
(not reality!) is given to us always only through our descriptions, and these descriptions
can show us only the relations of things. That is, the things of the world are given to us
always in a relational way. Every logically thinking man should accept that nothing can
be non-relational. (Cf. e.g. PSH 50 and 53-54.)
Rorty does not stand alone with this view, since – as he writes – philosophers as
diverse as William James and Friedrich Nietzsche, Donald Davidson and Jacques
Derrida, Hilary Putnam and Bruno Latour, John Dewey and Michael Foucault – and
Richard Rorty, of course – are anti-dualists. There is an overlapping among those
American and European thinkers who are trying to replace the world pictures constructed
with the aid of metaphysical dualisms inherited from the Greeks (essence and accident;
substance and property; appearance and reality, etc.) with a picture of a flux of
continually changing relations. (Cf. PSH 47.)
3) If everything is in flow and flux than it is obvious that even reasons do not have
any final natural order. (Cf. PSH 36.)
4) The concept of objective also cannot be defined as a relation to the intrinsic
features of things. The new concept of objective is given by Rorty as intersubjective
agreement. (Cf. PSH 15, 50-51.)
5) If nothing has any unchangeable, intrinsic nature, then truth cannot mean
correspondence between a sentence and a real feature of a thing. The intrinsic nature and
the correspondence theory of truth stand and fall together.
It follows from all of this that Rorty’s naturalism and nominalism goes together with the
denial of the traditional representational epistemology, but he cannot be considered a
solipsist philosopher. He does not deny the existence of the world, as it entails from his
famous passage of his Contingency book:
“We need to make a distinction between the claim that the world is out there and the
claim that truth is out there. To say that the world is out there, that it is not our
creation, is to say, with common sense, that most things in space and time are the
effects of causes which do not include human mental states. To say that truth is not
out there is simply to say that where there are no sentences there is no truth, that
sentences are elements of human languages, and that human languages are human
creations.
20
Alexander Kremer, ‘An Interview with Richard Rorty’, in Alexander Kremer - John Ryder (eds.), Self
and Society. Vol. IV. Central European Pragmatist Forum. Amsterdam & New York: Rodopi Press, 2009,
228.
12
Truth cannot be out there – cannot exist independently of the human mind – because
sentences cannot so exist, or be out there. The world is out there, but descriptions of
the world are not. Only descriptions of the world can be true or false. The world on
its own – unaided by describing activities of human beings – cannot.” (CIS 4-5.)
My claim is that, although Rorty refuses to write a special ontology or even ontology at
all, for he wants “to argue that cultural politics should replace ontology, and also that
whether it should or not is itself a matter of cultural politics”,21 his world-description can
still be considered a kind of ontology. It does not matter how he calls that he creates, he
still takes a stand on the existence of the things on the one hand, and on the rejection of
solipsism and that of any kind of absolute, the intrinsic nature of the things and the
ultimate causal order of the world on the other. Hence, in my opinion, we still can find an
ontology in Rorty’s philosophy – although it is not a systematically explained, separate
ontology –, but it takes stand on the basic ontological questions of being and entities.
Rorty’s world-comprehension, world-description can be considered his ontology.
3.2. Rorty’s truth-description can be regarded as a special combination and
improvement of some characteristics of the pragmatist and analytic truth theories
When I describe these pragmatic and analytic effects, draw first of all on his article,
‘Truth – without Correspondence to Reality’22 (1994), supplemented by lines of thought
also from other articles.
a) Pragmatic features:
The pragmatic effects can be grasped in two features which characterizes not only
Rorty’s neo-pragmatism, but also the traditional pragmatism. On the one hand, only those
beliefs can be true which are provably good in our personal and/or community practice,
and justification is much more important than truth, on the other hand. In pragmatist
sense only those beliefs can be considered true, which – even if very indirectly – can
change also practice, that is useful in wide sense. For from pragmatist point of view those
questions have a point “which meet William James’s requirement that any difference
must make a difference. Other questions, such as those about the ontological status of
constellations or of moral values, are ‘merely verbal’ or, worse yet, ‘merely
philosophical’.”23 (PSH 58)
All of this is tied closely to pragmatist meliorism according to which the first and
foremost goal of philosophy is not to find an eternal substance above history, but the
constant struggle to make our lives better both on the private and the social level, and
regarding this goal philosophy itself is a tool. In the Relativism article we can read the
following:
21
Richard Rorty, Philosophy as Cultural Politics, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007, 5.
(Further: PCP)
22
Richard Rorty, ‘Truth – without Correspondence to Reality’, in Philosophy and Social Hope. LondonNew York: Penguin Books, 1999. – Further: PSH.
23
Rorty says similar things in different texts. In his article, ’Relativism: Finding and Making’ he wrote for
example: „Inquiry that does not achieve coordination of behaviour is not inquiry but simply wordplay.”
(PSH xxv.)
13
„So, for pragmatists there is no sharp break between natural science and social
science, nor between social science and politics, nor between politics, philosophy
and literature. All areas of culture are parts of the same endeavour to make life
better. There is no deep split between theory and practice, because on a pragmatist
view all so-called ’theory’ which is not wordplay is always already practice” (PSH
xxv. – Emphasis: A. K.)
On the other hand, as we had seen it in James, justification is more important than truth.
The reason of this relation which can also be found in classical pragmatism is that
contrary to those claims which are ’true’ in particular relations, ’truth’ – according to the
Plato-Decartes-Kant tradition in European philosophy – is absolute, eternal and
independent from the world of relations. In conclusion, essentially the ’Truth’ cannot be
defined, and moreover it cannot be articulated in its whole. Truth is ineffable. On the
contrary to the justification of trueness of given statements and beliefs which however is
always relative, timely and historical, since a given statement and belief can only always
be justified before a given historical audience. As Rorty says it in one of his interviews:
„I think it was unfortunate that pragmatism became a sort of theory or definition of
truth. It would have been better if the pragmatists had said, ’we can tell you about
justification, but cannot tell you anything about truth, there is nothing to be said
about truth.’ We know how to justify beliefs, we know that the adjective ’true’ is that
we apply to the beliefs we have justified. We know that a belief cannot be true
without being justified. That is all we know about truth. Justification is relative to an
audience regarding truth-candidates, truth is not relative to anything. Just because it
is not relative to anything, there is nothing to be said about it. Truth with a capital
’T’ is sort of like God. There is not much you can say about God. That is why
theologians talk about ineffability, and that is why pragmatists tend to say that truth
is indefinable.” (Rorty on Truth – an interview24. – Emphasis: A. K.)
Exactly this distinction is the reason why pragmatists are accused of mixing absolute,
eternal truth and justification. According to Rorty, pragmatists answer to this charge
essentially in two ways. Some – like Peirce, James and Putnam – think that we can hold
on to the absolute sense of ’true’ if we mean ’justification in the ideal situation’ under it,
with the situation which Peirce called ’the end of inquiry’ among ideal circumstances.
However, others like Dewey, and in a certain sense Davidson, think that not much can be
said about the absolute, eternal truth, and philosophers should only confine themselves to
justification, to what Dewey called ’warranted assertibility’. Rorty chooses consciously
the latter strategy, because he thinks that the struggles of Putnam and Habermas in
applying the „ideal epistemic situation” do not seems to be more useful than that of the
definition of „correspondence to reality” or any other definition which is used by
24
This is one part of a series of interviews with philosophers, writers, scientist and other kinds of
intellectuals about the relationship between beauty and consolation. In this part, part 23 (Of Beauty and
Consolation: Part 23 – Richard Rorty), the famous American pragmatist philosopher Richard Rorty is being
interviewed.(http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-6148968394915050958#docid=809705947612929606)
14
philosophers to give the definitive explanation of the world ’true’. (Cf. PSH 32.) Rorty
summarizes his thoughts on the relationship between truth and justification as follows:
„To sum up, my reply to the claim that pragmatists confuse truth and justification is
to turn this charge against those who make it. They are the ones who are confused,
because they think of truth as something towards which we are moving, something
we get closer to the more justification we have. By contrast, pragmatists think that
there are a lot of detailed things to be said about justification to any given audience,
but nothing to be said about justification in general. That is why there is nothing
general to be said about the nature of limits of human knowledge, nor anything to be
said about a connection between justification and truth.” (PSH 38. – Emphasis: A.
Kremer)
From this understanding of ’Truth’ and the priority of justification at least two
consequences can be derived for neopragmatists, including Rorty. These are, on the one
hand, antirepresentationalism, and on the other hand, the interpretation of our connection
to the world as a merely causal connection. Because, if we cannot say anything about
’Truth’ in a definitive manner, and due to its non-relational and unprovable feature even
its existence becomes questionable, than consequently recognition cannot be understood
as representation. Rorty thinks, together with several other philosophers, among them
with Dewey, Davidson and Goodman, that
„we should give up the idea that knowledge is an attempt to represent reality. Rather,
we should view inquiry as a way of using reality. So the relation between our truth
claims and the rest of the world is causal rather than representational. It causes us to
hold beliefs, and we continue to hold the beliefs which prove to be reliable guides to
getting what we want. Goodman is right to say that there is no one Way the World Is,
and so one way it is to be accurately represented. But there are lots of ways to act so
as to realize human hopes of happiness. The attainment of such happiness is not
something distinct from the attainment of justified belief; rather, the latter is a special
case of the former.” (PSH 33.)
However, the acknowledgement of things existing independently from us in space and
time, and the denial of representationalism makes the acknowledgement of at least the
causal pressures necessary. Since without this, the acknowledged things which would
exist in this way merely in themselves could not be of any effect on us, and the selfcontained character of our world-descriptions would be unavoidable for Rorty. As a
nominalist who wants to avoid solipsism, Rorty must claim the causal connection at least:
„So even if there is no Way the World Is, even if there is no such thing as ’the
intrinsic nature of reality’, there are still causal pressures. These pressures will be
described in different ways at different times and for different purposes, but they are
pressures none the less.” (PSH 33.)
However, the pan-relationism of pragmatism cannot be denied even by Rorty, and as we
could see he does not wish to deny it. Hence, claiming the causal pressures he questions
15
the ultimate natural order of reasons at the same time. Since these dimensions relate to
each other logically in a necessary manner. The objective, unchanging reality and its
recognition or the natural order of reasons are the preconditions of the representational
understanding of recognition (and wiht this the threat of scepticism), which however
leads to the correspondence comprehension of truth. All of this stands or falls as one. So,
if the correspondence theory of truth becomes questionable from a number of causes,
than
„we shall recognize no such thing as ’our knowledge of the external world’, nor any
such order as ’the natural order of reasons’ – an order which, for example, starts
with the ’deliverances of the senses’ and works up from there in the time-honoured
manner imagined by empiricists from Locke to Quine. These two notions are
interlocked since, as Williams says, ’the threat of scepticism is indissolubly linked to
a foundational conception of knowledge’ and that conception is indissolubly linked
to that of context-free justification. To give up the idea of context-free justification is
to give up the ide of ’knowledge’ as a suitable object os study – the idea which
Descartes and Kant inherited from Plato’s Theatetus.” (PSH 34. – Emphasis: A. K.)
In the academic philosophy after Kant questioning the central role of recognition is a
strange effort. But Rorty still does exactly this and rather follows Dewey and Emerson,
when with the central philosophical significance of recognition he discards also the need
of epistemological certainity. He chooses rather the pragmatist meliorism:
„...philosophy should stop trying to provide reassurance and instead encourage what
Emerson called ’self-reliance’. To encourage self-reliance, in this sense, is to
encourage the willingness to turn one’s back both on the past and on the attempt of
’the classical philosophy of Europe’ to ground the past in the eternal. It is to attempt
Emersonian self-creation on a communal scale. To say that one should replace
knowledge by hope is to say much the same thing: that one should stop worrying
about whether what one believes is well grounded and start worrying about whether
one has been imaginative enough to think up interesting alternatives to one’s present
beliefs.” (PSH 34. – Emphasis: A. K.)
b) Analytic features:
If we replace the central role of recognition with hope, since nothing has an unchanging
intrinsic nature; if everything is relational and – retaining only the causal pressures – we
discard the representationalist interpretation of recognition, than the correspondence
theory of truth becomes untenable, too. Instead of this, in the case of Rorty – due to his
intellectual heritage – we can only speak primarily of a pragmatically transformed
coherence comprehension of truth. Truth is namely a relation. My beliefs (my statements,
my judgements, my phenomena, that is something human) must be compared to
something else. If I cannot compare them eventually to something human-independent,
unchangeable intrinsic nature, I can only compare them to each other. And this creates
the coherence comprehension of truth, which shows already the analytic influence on
Rorty:
16
“We pragmatists, who have been impressed by Peirce’s criticism of Descartes, think
that both skeptics and foundationalists are led astray by the picture of beliefs as
attempts to represent reality, and by the associated idea that truth is a matter of
correspondence to reality. So we become coherentists. But we coherentists remain
divided about what, if anything, needs to be said about truth. I think that, once one
has explicated the distinction between justification and truth by that between present
and future justifiability, there is little more to be said.” (RC 5.)
However, Rorty does not omit to emphasize in the footnote that the coherence
comprehension of truth is not necessariliy identical with the coherence theory of truth:
„Being a coherentist in this sense does not necessarily mean having a coherence
theory of truth. Davidson's repudiation of the latter label for his view, a label he had
previously accepted, is a corollary of his claim that there can be no definition of the
term "true-in-L" for variable L. Davidson's present view, with which I have come to
agree, is that "[W]e should not say that truth is correspondence, coherence,
warranted assertability, ideally justified assertability, what is accepted in the
conversation of the right people, what science will end up maintaining, what explains
the convergence on single theories in science, or the success of our ordinary beliefs.
To the extent that realism and antirealism depend on one or another of these views of
truth we should refuse to endorse either." (‘The Structure and Content of Truth’,
Journal of Philosophy vol. 87 (1990), p. 309).” (Quoted by Rorty: RC 26-27. –
Emphasis: A. Kremer.)
As a neopragmatist, Rorty thinks that the reason people try to make their beliefs coherent
in not that they love truth but because they cannot help doing so. Building upon D.
Dennett’s research, he claims that our minds can no more stand incoherence than our
brains can stand neuro-chemical imbalance, which is the physiological correlate of such
incoherence. The need to make our beliefs coherent is, however, not separable from the
need for the respect of our peers. We strongly demand respect of – at least – certain
peers, because we cannot trust our own beliefs, nor maintain our long-term self-respect,
unless we are sure that our most important conversational interlocutors agree among
themselves – despite some of our strange beliefs – that we are not crazy. Both needs
(coherence of our beliefs and respect of our peers) follow – according to Rorty – from the
fact that to imagine a form of human life we have to imagine agreement in judgments as
well as in meanings. (Cf. RC 15.)25 Davidson fully supports this idea, which comes from
Wittgenstein, when he says:
„The ultimate source of both objectivity and communication is the triangle that, by
relating speaker, interpreter, and the world, determines the contents of thought and
speech.”26 (Emphasis: A. K.)
25
From all of this we can also see, that Rorty has not only a brilliant, ironic and witty style, but – as a more
general analytic heritage – he makes deadly accurate analysis of concepts at the proper points of the train of
thoughts.
26
Donald Davidson ‘The Structure and Content of Truth’ (Journal of Philosophy vol. 87, 1990) p. 325,
quoted by Rorty. The whole Davidsonian paragraph sounds as follows: “The idea that the propositional
17
We would not know what we believed, nor have any beliefs, unless our belief had a place
and position in a network of beliefs and desires. But that network would not exist unless
we and others could pair off features of our non-human enviroment with assent to our
utterances by other language-users and utterances caused by those very features. Rorty
and Davidson would like to draw all the conclusions of Hegel’s and Mead’s recognition
that our selves are dialogical all the way down. There would not be language without the
mentioned triangulation, and it also means that we could not have any language or any
beliefs, without being in touch with both human community and non-human reality. (Cf.
RC 16.)
“Coherence, truth, and community go together, not because truth is to be defined in
terms of coherence rather than correspondence, in terms of social practice rather than
in terms of coping with non-human forces, but simply because to ascribe a belief is
automatically to ascribe a place in a largely coherent set of mostly true beliefs.” (RC
16. – Emphasis: A. Kremer)
It is obvious that the analytic heritage is immediately modified by Rorty’s hands. Why
can we say that the coherence comprehension of truth is not identical with the coherence
theory of truth? The ultimate reason of that is that the traditional coherence theory of
truth is based on a theory of meaning, as the correspondence theory of truth, and it can
become easily a supporter of realism or anti-realism. But Rorty, together with Davidson
and others, applies and develops consciously not the early Wittgenstein’s meaning-based
theory of language, but the late Wittgenstein’s usage-based theory of language which is
close in several aspects to the pragmatist views.
According to Davidson’s comprehension of language, which is accepted by Rorty,
there is not such thing as language in traditional sense:
„There is no such thing as a language, not if a language is anything like what
philosophers, at least, have supposed. There is therefore no such thing to be learned
or mastered. We must give up the idea of a clearly defined shared structure which
language users master and then apply to cases... We should give up the attempt to
illuminate how we communicate by appeal to conventions.” (D. Davidson: „A
Nice Derangement of Epitaphs,” in Lepore, ed., Truth and Interpretation, p. 446.
Italics from Rorty who quotes it: CIS, p. 15.)
Davidson develops namely Wittgenstein’s view of vocabularies as tools in a way, that he
obviously has doubts about the traditional, before Wittgenstein existing comprehension
of language. Davidson – and Rorty, too – refuses the interpretation that language is a
medium which expresses or describes meanings and cannot accept the views that
content of observation sentences is (in most cases) determined by what is common and salient to both
speaker and interpreter is a direct correlate of the common-sense view of language learning. It has profound
consequences for the relation between thought and meaning, and for our view of the role of truth, for it not
only ensures that there is a ground level on speakers share views, but also that what they share is a largely
correct picture of a common world. The ultimate source of both objectivity and communication is the
triangle that, by relating speaker, interpreter, and the world, determines the contents of thought and speech.
Given this source, there is no room for a relativized concept of truth.”
18
language has a definite task or it is an entity with a clearly defined common structure.
For Davidson and Rorty language is a tool of world adjustment. Taking our relationship
to the world as basically causal, Rorty sees that the right pragmatist attitude in connection
with truth is that we do not need more philosophical theory of the nature of truth or the
meaning of ’true’, than a philosophical theory of the nature of danger or the meaning of
’danger’. Both have the same purpose, namely, to warn people that they may not have
seen all the consequences of their proposed action. (Cf. RC 4.)
From all of this follows in Davidson’s opinion, that „truth is not an epistemic
concept”. (PSH 37.) Hence, we never can find an interesting and important connection
between the concepts of justification and truth:
„The only connection between these two notions is that, for the same reason that
most beliefs are true, most beliefs are justified. For, a believer who is (unlike a child
or a psychotic) a fully fledged member of her community will always be able to
produce justification for most of her beliefs – justification which meets the demands
of that community.” (PSH 37. – Emphasis: A. Kremer)
But in this way we do not get back to some necessary connection of justification and
truth. We cannot say that those claims of a community member will be more true, which
are more justified and vice versa. On this critical point, Rorty gives his argumentation
with deadly accuracy as he usually does in important questions; those arguments shared
with Davidson, which makes – in Rorty’s opinion – Davidson’s philosophy pragmatist
(cf. PSH 41-42):
„The fact that most beliefs are justified is, like the fact that most beliefs are true,
merely one more consequence of the holistic character of belief-ascription. That, in
turn, is a consequence of the fact that beliefs which are expressed as meaningful
sentences necessariliy have lots of predictable inferential connections with lots of
other meaningful sentences.” (PSH 37.)
We cannot, no matter how hard we try, continue to hold a belief which we have tried, and
conspicuously failed, to weave together with our other beliefs into a justificatory web.
The best we can do is to distract our own attention from the question of why we hold
certain beliefs. For most matters of common concern, however, our community will insist
that we attend to those questions; that we think over again those problems. So such
distraction is only feasible for private obsessions, such as my conviction that „some day
my lucky number will win the jackpot” or to see a black cat means that it brings
misfortune. (Cf. PSH 37.) What is more, such description of the relationship between
truth and justification not only harmonizes with the pragmatist view that language and
vocabularies are always tools of adjusting our relational world, but it also resists the
charge of solipsism, relativism and arbitrariness. The Davidsonian summary of a truth
theory shared absolutely with Rorty sounds as follows:
„Davidson’s claim that a truth theory for a natural language is nothing more or less
than an empirical explanation of the causal realtions which hold between features of
the enviroment and the holding true of sentences, seems to me all the guarantee we
19
need that we are, always and everywhere, ’in touch with the world’. If we have such
a guarantee, then we have all the insurance we need against ’relativism’ and
’arbitrariness’. For Davidson tells us that we can never be more arbitrary than the
world lets us be.” (PSH 33. – Emphasis: A. K.)
3.3. Rorty’s truth-comprehension is determined by his ontology
Finally, we have to speak about the determinating role of Rorty’s naturalism and
nominalism, that is his ontology regarding his truth comprehension, since this determines
his „bricolage” in the field. In this way I can justify my general thesis that always
ontology determines a philosopher’s truth comprehension or at least frames it,27 and
Rorty is no exception.
Rorty regards it as a principle that truth is rather made than found. This view is
drawn from his nominalism, since nominalism allows neither the existence of some
absolute or some universal order of causes, nor even generality’s independent existence
from human consciousness. However, truth is not particular and situational in lots of
cases, but general, which can have its place exclusively in language. But language is
produced by human beings. The background of this claim is, according to Rorty, that
everything is a social construction, and all awareness is a linguistic affair. This standpoint
entails that in his opinion every philosophical problem, even the question of truth, is
made rather than found. As he wrote it in his article, ‘Relativism: Finding and Making’
(1996):
„This question, the question of the nature of the problems which the Greeks,
Descartes, Kant and Hegel have bequeathed to us, leads us back around to the
distinction between finding and making. The philosophical tradition has insisted that
these problems are found, in the sense that they are inevitably encountered by any
reflective mind. The pragmatist tradition has insisted that they are made – are
artificial rather than natural – and can be unmade by using a different vocabulary
than that which the philosophical tradition has used.” (PSH xxi-xxii.)
As we can see from all of this, Rorty’s comprehension of truth is determined by his
version of pragmatism. Quod erat demonstrandum.
References:
Davidson, Donald, „A Nice Derangement of Epitaphs”, in Ernest Lepore (ed.), Truth and
Interpretation: Perspectives on the Philosophy of Donald Davidson, Oxford: Basil
Blackwell, 1986.
27
The severity of determination of truth comprehension depends on the logical severity of the
philosopher’s ontology, that is on the ratio of necessity and contingency in her ontology.
20
Davidson, Donald, ‘The Structure and Content of Truth’, Journal of Philosophy vol. 87,
1990.
Dewey, John, (1938) "Logic: The Theory of Inquiry”. Repr. in The Later Works of John
Dewey, 1925-1953. Vol. 12. Carbondale and Edwardsville: Southern Illinois
University Press, 1991.
Dewey, John, ‘Propositions, Warranted Assertibility, and Truth’, in The Essential Dewey,
vol. 2, ed. by Larry A. Hickman and Thomas M. Alexander, Bloomington and
Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 1998.
Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich, Phenomenology of Spirit, transl. by A. V. Miller, Delhi:
Motilal Banarsidass Publ., 1998.
Heidegger, Martin, Being and Time, translated by J. Macquarrie & E. Robinson, New
York: Harper & Row, 1962.
Hickman, Larry A., ‘John Dewey, 1859-1952’, in: The Blackwell Guide to American
Philosophy, Oxford: Blackwell Publishing, 2004.
David Hildebrand, Dewey, Oxford: Oneworld, 2008.
Kremer, Alexander, ‘An Interview with Richard Rorty’, in Alexander Kremer, John
Ryder (eds.), Self and Society, vol. IV. Central European Pragmatist Forum,
Amsterdam & New York: Rodopi Press, 2009.
Of Beauty and Consolation: Part 23 – Richard Rorty. The famous American pragmatist
philosopher
Richard
Rorty
is
being
interviewed.
(http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=6148968394915050958#docid=80970
5947612929606)
Rorty and his Critics, ed. by Robert B. Brandom, Oxford: Blackwell, 2004.
Rorty, Richard, Philosophy as Cultural Politics, Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 2007.
Rorty, Richard, ’Relativism: Finding and Making’, in Philosophy and Social Hope,
London-New York: Penguin Books, 1999.
Rorty, Richard, ‘Truth – without Correspondence to Reality’, in Philosophy and Social
Hope, London-New York: Penguin Books, 1999.
Rorty, Richard, ‘A World – without Substances or Essences’, in Philosophy and Social
Hope. London-New York: Penguin Books, 1999.
21