Skip to main content
Log in

Paradoxes and the limits of theorizing about propositional attitudes

  • S.I.: Intensionality in Mathematics
  • Published:
Synthese Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Abstract

Propositions are central to at least most theorizing about the connection between our mental lives and the world: we use them in our theories of an array of attitudes including belief, desire, hope, fear, knowledge, and understanding. Unfortunately, when we press on these theories, we encounter a relatively neglected family of paradoxes first studied by Arthur Prior. I argue that these paradoxes present a fatal problem for most familiar resolutions of paradoxes. In particular, I argue that truth-value gap, contextualist, situation theoretic, revision theoretic, ramified, and dialetheist approaches to the paradoxes must deny us the conceptual resources that they themselves make use of, on pain of contradiction (though contradiction need not be painful for dialetheism). I then detail the costs of the extant strategies that avoid this issue: Hartry Field’s paracomplete approach; Andrew Bacon’s classical treatment of indeterminacy; a generalization of ideas from Prior, Nicholas J.J. Smith, and Hartley Slater; and free logics as recently explored by Bacon, John Hawthorne, and Gabriel Uzquiano. I argue that none of these is perfect, and that each restricts the theories we can endorse in a variety of areas of philosophy. I spell these restrictions out, showing, I hope, that the further investigation of these paradoxes must be a part of future research on propositional attitudes.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Similar content being viewed by others

Notes

  1. This is a bit quick: other fears, such as a fear of heights, plausibly do not involve propositions. But it is enough for my purposes that some fears do, and when I speak below of all my fears or all your hopes, I mean to quantify over only those fears and hopes that involve propositions.

  2. Thanks to Eric Swanson and Chris Hom for pressing me on this point.

  3. One might also adopt a very broad antirealist stance, contending that all my talk about the way the world is has been misguided, because there is simply no determinate way the world is in the first place. Insofar as I understand this sort of view, I suspect that it must still address versions of the paradoxes, because they result from our attempts to theorize about attitudes, rather than anything intrinsic to the notions of propositions or the world. Of course, this argument cannot be made precise without first having a detailed antirealist theory to work with, but my suspicion is that given any translation into antirealist terms of talk about attitudes and their realization, fulfillment, etc., the sets of assumptions that lead to paradoxes will still raise nontrivial questions. Thanks to Kevin Kelly and Roy Cook for encouraging me to think more about this sort of response.

  4. Thanks to Jonathan Dorsey for raising this point.

  5. It is not important that two different attitudes are involved, or that you and I are involved, or that these particular attitudes are involved. There are, however, some reasons to think that attitudes more closely tied to rationality, such as belief, and maybe desire, do not lead to similar paradoxes.

  6. Or that we should accept neither, or that we should reject both. I continue to talk in terms of truth-value gaps, but the arguments translate without trouble to theories of acceptance gaps or rejection gluts; nothing I say here relies on anything grandiose about the nature of truth.

  7. This is a slightly sloppy way of putting things, because propositions might not actually contain quantifiers. More carefully, one could say that every proposition is best expressed by a sentence containing only restricted quantifiers, and that no sentence containing propositional quantifiers expresses a proposition within the domains over which those quantifiers range.

  8. Prior’s own answer seems to rely on a first-come, first-served principle, according to which the attitude that is supposed to arise later is the one that is blocked. This, however, has as a consequence that since 2007 I have been the only being capable of having any propositional attitudes. See Tucker and Thomason (2011) for more on this problem. I briefly gesture at a way to implement Prior’s approach without this consequence in (Tucker 2013, Sect. 6).

  9. At least, not with respect to fears and hopes. Slater (2011) does briefly discuss thoughts, arguing that Socrates must have an “extra, unexpressed thought ... that is not true when he utters [‘Socrates utters a falsehood’]” [p. 49]. I am not convinced either that this is correct or that it truly avoids the paradox Slater is concerned with, but even if it is and it does, I see no natural way to translate it to fears or hopes in a way that avoids intensional paradoxes.

  10. Indeed, in addition to restricting propositional quantification, traditional ramification incorporates just such a theory of propositions. This point should have been more explicit in (Tucker 2013). The general approach of relying on one’s theory of propositions has also recently been defended by Uzquiano (2015).

  11. To be sure, we might follow Kaplan (1995) and take versions of the Appendix B paradox to present problems for possible-worlds theories, but the problems can be only that such theories have unintuitive consequences, not that they contradict themselves.

  12. One possible exception is a theory Max Cresswell (1985, Ch. 9) proposes, which builds structured propositions out of entities defined by a possible-worlds semantics. The general point about structured propositions was made recently by Deutsch (2008), though of course it has been around since 1903.

References

  • Anderson, C. A. (1987). Semantical antinomies in the logic of sense and denotation. Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic, 28(1), 99–114.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Bacon, A. (2015). Can the clasical logician avoid the revenge paradoxes? The Philosophical Review, 124(3), 299–352.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Bacon, A., Hawthorne, J., & Uzquiano, G. (2016). Higher-order free logic and the Prior–Kaplan paradox. Canadian Journal of Philosophy, 46(4–5), 493–541.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Barwise, J., & Etchemendy, J. (1987). The liar. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Bealer, G. (1982). Quality and concept. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

    Book  Google Scholar 

  • Burge, T. (1979). Semantical paradox. Journal of Philosophy, 76(4), 169–198.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Burge, T. (1984). Epistemic paradox. Journal of Philosophy, 81(1), 5–29.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Cresswell, M. J. (1985). Structured meanings. Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Deutsch, H. (2008). Review of the nature and structure of content. Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews. http://ndpr.nd.edu/re-view.cfm?id=13165.

  • Field, H. (2000). Indeterminacy, degree of belief, and excluded middle. Noûs, 34(1), 1–30.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Field, H. (2008). Saving truth from paradox. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

    Book  Google Scholar 

  • van Fraassen, B. C. (1968). Presupposition, implications, and self-reference. Journal of Philosophy, 65(5), 136–152.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Glanzberg, M. (2004). A context-hierarchical approach to truth and the liar paradox. Journal of Philosophical Logic, 33(1), 27–88.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Gödel, K. (1944). Russell’s mathematical logic. In P. Schilpp (Ed.), The philosophy of Bertrand Russell (pp. 125–153). Evanston: Northwestern University.

    Google Scholar 

  • Groeneveld, W. (1994). Dynamic semantics and circular propositions. Journal of Philosophical Logic, 23(3), 267–306.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Gupta, A., & Belnap, N. D, Jr. (1993). The revision theory of truth. Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press.

    Book  Google Scholar 

  • Herzberger, H. G. (1976). Presuppositional policies. In A. Kasher (Ed.), Language in focus (pp. 139–164). Dordrecht: D. Reidel Publishing Co.

    Google Scholar 

  • Kaplan, D. (1995). A problem in possible-world semantics. In W. Sinnott-Armstrong, D. Raffman, & N. Asher (Eds.), Modality, morality, and belief: Essays in honor of Ruth Barcan Marcus (pp. 41–52). Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Kneale, W. (1972). Propositions and truth in natural languages. Mind, New Series, 81(322), 225–243.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Kripke, S. (1975). Outline of a theory of truth. Journal of Philosophy, 72, 690–715.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Kripke, S. A. (2011). A puzzle about time and thought. In Philosophical troubles, chap. 13 (pp. 373–379). Oxford: Oxford University Press.

  • Martin, R. L., & Woodruff, P. (1976). On representing ‘True-in-\(L\)’ in \(L\). In A. Kasher (Ed.), Language in focus (pp. 113–117). Dordrecht: D. Reidel Publishing Co.

    Google Scholar 

  • Parsons, C. (1974). The liar paradox. Journal of Philosophical Logic, 3, 381–412.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Pollard, C. (2008). Hyperintensions. Journal of Logic and Computation, 18(2), 257–282.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Priest, G. (2010). Hopes fade for saving truth. Philosophy, 85(1), 109–140.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Prior, A. N. (1961). On a family of paradoxes. Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic, 2, 16–32.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Ramsey, F. P. (1925). The foundations of mathematics. Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society, 25, 338–384.

    Google Scholar 

  • Russell, B. (1903). The principles of mathematics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Slater, H. (2011). Translatable self-reference. Australian Journal of Logic, 10, 45–51.

    Google Scholar 

  • Smith, N. J. (2006). Semantic regularity and the liar paradox. The Monist (Special Issue on Truth), 89, 178–202.

    Google Scholar 

  • Tucker, D. (2013). Outline of a theory of quantification. In N. Griffin & B. Linsky (Eds.), The Palgrave centenary companion to principia mathematica (pp. 337–365). Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.

    Chapter  Google Scholar 

  • Tucker, D. (in press). Paradoxes and restricted quantification: A non-hierarchical approach. Thought: A Journal of Philosophy.

  • Tucker, D., & Thomason, R. H. (2011). Paradoxes of intensionality. Review of Symbolic Logic, 4(3), 394–411.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Uzquiano, G. (2015). A neglected resolution of Russell’s paradox of propositions. Review of Symbolic Logic, 8(2), 328–344.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Yablo, S. (1993). Paradox without self-reference. Analysis, 53, 251–252.

    Article  Google Scholar 

Download references

Acknowledgements

Thanks to Rich Thomason, Bruno Whittle, and Hartry Field for their helpful comments and discussion.

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Dustin Tucker.

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Check for updates. Verify currency and authenticity via CrossMark

Cite this article

Tucker, D. Paradoxes and the limits of theorizing about propositional attitudes. Synthese 198 (Suppl 5), 1075–1094 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11229-018-01902-2

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Accepted:

  • Published:

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11229-018-01902-2

Keywords

Navigation