Language, Truth and Logic

Paperback, 160 pages

Published June 1, 1952 by Dover Publications, Brand: Dover Publications.

ISBN:
978-0-486-20010-1
Copied ISBN!

View on OpenLibrary

4 stars (4 reviews)

An introduction to logical positivism via the verification principle, which assigns meaning to a statement to the extent the statement is or can be supported by evidence.

1 edition

Language, Truth and Logic

No rating

Content warning: I am not a philosopher.

The logical positivists formed during the early 20th century with the objective of purifying philosophy by purging it of anything not supported by evidence. Ayer, an English philosopher in his early 20s, joined the cause in the early ’30s; by the mid ’30s this book appeared. Ayer’s advance to logical positivism was to weaken evidentiary standards to accept statements as meaningful if they allowed for the possibility of having evidence. A logical positivist says the statement “There are no swimming pools on Jupiter” is meaningless because it is accompanied by no evidence. Ayer assigns the statement meaning because it’s possible, albeit not necessarily practical, to imagine how such evidence could exist. Armed with this and a few other refinements (the non-empirical a priori, probable truth, linguistic equivalences), Ayer goes on to excise swaths of philosophy — metaphysics, aesthetics, ethical inquiry, theological reasoning — …

avatar for archduke

rated it

4 stars