TY - BOOK ID - 137010502 TI - How to Swim in Sinking Sands : The Sorites Paradox and the Nature and Logic of Vague Language PY - 2020 SN - 3957437547 3957431972 PB - Paderborn Brill | mentis DB - UniCat KW - Paradox des Haufens KW - Vagheit KW - Unbestimmtheit KW - Wittgenstein KW - Philosophie der normalen Sprache KW - Paradox of the Heap KW - Vagueness KW - Indeterminacy KW - Ordinary Language Philosophy UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:137010502 AB - This book examines philosophical approaches to linguistic vagueness, a puzzling feature of natural language that gives rise to the ancient Sorites Paradox and challenges classical logic and semantics.The Sorites, or Paradox of the Heap, consists in three claims: (1) One grain of sand does not make a heap. (2) One billion grains of sand do make a heap. (3) For any two amounts of sand differing by at most one grain: either both are heaps of sand, or neither one is. The third claim is rendered plausible by an initial conviction that vague predicates like 'heap' tolerate small changes. However, the repeated application of a tolerance principle to the second claim yields the further proposition that one grain of sand does make a heap - which contradicts claim number one. Consequently, many philosophers reject or modify tolerance principles for vague predicates. Inga Bones reassesses prominent responses to the Sorites and defends a Wittgensteinian dissolution of the paradox. She argues that vague predicates are, indeed, tolerant and discusses how this finding relates to the paradox itself, to the notion of validity and to the concept of a borderline case. ER -