Truth & Truthfulness: An Essay in GenealogyWhat does it mean to be truthful? What role does truth play in our lives? What do we lose if we reject truthfulness? No philosopher is better suited to answer these questions than Bernard Williams. Writing with his characteristic combination of passion and elegant simplicity, he explores the value of truth and finds it to be both less and more than we might imagine. |
Contents
The Problem | 1 |
2 Authority | 7 |
3 Nietzsche | 12 |
Genealogy | 20 |
2 Naturalism | 22 |
3 The State of Nature Is Not the Pleistocene | 27 |
4 How Can Fictions Help? | 31 |
5 Shameful Origins | 35 |
4 Truthfulness and Freedom | 141 |
What Was Wrong with Minos? | 149 |
2 Thucydides | 151 |
3 Legendary Times | 155 |
4 The Past and the Truth | 161 |
From Sincerity to Authenticity | 172 |
2 Rousseau | 173 |
3 Diderot and Rameaus Nephew | 185 |
6 The Genealogy of Truthfulness | 38 |
The State of Nature A Rough Guide | 41 |
2 Plain Truths | 45 |
3 Space Time and Indeterminacy | 53 |
The Story So Far | 57 |
Truth Assertion and Belief | 63 |
2 Assertions and Truth | 66 |
3 Assertions and Knowledge | 76 |
4 Beliefs and Truth | 79 |
Sincerity Lying and Other Styles of Deceit | 84 |
2 Trust | 88 |
3 Trustworthiness in Speech | 93 |
4 Dispositions of Sincerity | 96 |
5 Fetishizing Assertion | 100 |
6 Deserving the Truth | 110 |
Accuracy A Sense of Reality | 123 |
2 Methods and Obstacles | 126 |
3 Realism and Fantasy | 135 |
4 Steadying the Mind | 191 |
5 Authenticity and Other People | 199 |
Truthfulness Liberalism and Critique | 206 |
2 Democracy and Liberty | 210 |
3 The Marketplace of Ideas | 213 |
4 Critique | 219 |
5 The Critical Theory Test | 225 |
Making Sense | 233 |
2 Structures and Explanations | 241 |
3 Audiences | 250 |
4 Needs | 258 |
The Vocabulary of Truth An Example | 271 |
Notes | 279 |
| 309 | |
Acknowledgements | 321 |
| 323 | |


