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An Inquiry into Meaning and Truth (Rev. ed)

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Bertrand Russell is concerned with the foundations of knowledge which he approaches first through language. 'Meaning', as applied to words, is shown to be different for words of different kinds: object-words, proper names, logical words and dictionary words.

For a sentence we have to consider the way that it expresses something of the nature of an assertion, a denial, an imperative, a desire, or a question.

We can understand what it expresses if we know the meaning of its several words and the rules of syntax.

From this Russell passes to a discussion of a belief and a sentence in which it is expressed. 'Knowledge' and 'truth' involve the relationship of truth to experience and Russell considers whether we can know that there are unknowable truths.

The book concludes with an investigation of the structure of language and the structure of the world, with the suggestion that the former permits some inference as to the latter.

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Product Details
Spokesman Books
0851247377 / 9780851247373
Paperback / softback
121
25/10/2012
United Kingdom
English
352 p.
23 cm
academic/professional/technical Learn More
Reprint. This ed. originally published: London: Routledge, 1995.