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Single Idea 19128

[filed under theme 3. Truth / F. Semantic Truth / 1. Tarski's Truth / b. Satisfaction and truth ]

Full Idea

If axioms are formulated for a language (such as set theory) that lacks names for all objects, then they require the use of a satisfaction relation rather than a unary truth predicate.

Gist of Idea

If a language cannot name all objects, then satisfaction must be used, instead of unary truth

Source

Halbach,V/Leigh,G.E. (Axiomatic Theories of Truth (2013 ver) [2013], 3.3)

Book Ref

'Stanford Online Encyclopaedia of Philosophy', ed/tr. Stanford University [plato.stanford.edu], p.7


A Reaction

I take it this is an important idea for understanding why Tarski developed his account of truth based on satisfaction.


The 10 ideas from 'Axiomatic Theories of Truth (2013 ver)'

Semantic theories need a powerful metalanguage, typically including set theory [Halbach/Leigh]
We can reduce properties to true formulas [Halbach/Leigh]
Nominalists can reduce theories of properties or sets to harmless axiomatic truth theories [Halbach/Leigh]
A natural theory of truth plays the role of reflection principles, establishing arithmetic's soundness [Halbach/Leigh]
If deflationary truth is not explanatory, truth axioms should be 'conservative', proving nothing new [Halbach/Leigh]
If we define truth, we can eliminate it [Halbach/Leigh]
The T-sentences are deductively weak, and also not deductively conservative [Halbach/Leigh]
If a language cannot name all objects, then satisfaction must be used, instead of unary truth [Halbach/Leigh]
The FS axioms use classical logical, but are not fully consistent [Halbach/Leigh]
KF is formulated in classical logic, but describes non-classical truth, which allows truth-value gluts [Halbach/Leigh]