Minima Trivialia Bypassed

Salis, Pietro
2024-01-01

Abstract

Peirce’s pragmatist theory of truth holds that truth will be the outcome of an indefinitely adequate amount of scientific research. According to the minima trivialia objection, Peirce’s theory of truth is refuted by such common sense truths as that about what I ate for breakfast, which is hardly the outcome of a prolonged collective scientific endeavour. The argument does not work, however, if we endorse Sellars’s distinction between the manifest image and the scientific image of mankind in the world and the connected scientific realism: in this Sellarsian context, minima trivialia can be seen as false views from the perspective of the manifest image, like the existence and persistence of material objects, and not as proper truths, which are appreciated as such only from the point of view of the scientific image. Therefore, the endorsement of this distinction, which is quite compatible with Peirce’s framework, bypasses the minima trivialia objection.
2024
2025
Inglese
52
5
1289
1300
12
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11406-025-00815-y
Esperti anonimi
internazionale
scientifica
Minima trivialia; Peirce’s theory of truth; Realism; Sellars’s two images; Truth
no
Salis, Pietro
1.1 Articolo in rivista
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
1 Contributo su Rivista::1.1 Articolo in rivista
262
1
open
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