Truth: A History and a Guide for the Perplexed - Hardcover

Fernandez-Armesto, Felipe

 
9780312242534: Truth: A History and a Guide for the Perplexed

Synopsis

A fascinating look at truth in human society examines how, throughout history, people have tried to distinguish truth from falsehood and explains aspects of humanity's basic assumptions about truth.

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Review

The pursuit of truth, says Felipe Fernández-Armesto, is "the quest for language that can match reality". He believes that the nature of that quest has never quite been fully understood; Truth aims to fill the void. He identifies four key methods of determining the truth--what we feel, what we are told, what we figure out, and what we observe--which are given poetic names such as "the hairy ball--teeth optional" and "the cage of wild birds". These four methods always exist together in every culture, although each one may be differently valued in different places at different times.

But Western philosophy after Descartes, in Fernández-Armesto's assessment, has been largely hostile to these ways of knowledge, and has steadily come to question the very existence of truth. His summation of post-Cartesian philosophy is a largely negative one, which veers dangerously close to ad hominem assaults. Nietzsche, for example, who "was praised too much in his youth for his superior powers of mind and never achieved prowess or position to match", is dismissed as "a sexually inexperienced invalid" whose philosophy was "warped and mangled out of his own lonely, sickly self-hatred". Pragmatism and existentialism, two of the 20th century's most important philosophical movements, are found inadequate: the former is "the philosophy of lovers of technology"; while the latter "represents the retreat of Luddites and pessimists into the security of self-contemplation". But even though "philosophical subjectivism, scientific uncertainties, and dumbing, numbing linguistics" have served to undermine the notion of truth, Fernández-Armesto believes, they cannot destroy it thoroughly. It seems that even in the face of relativism, truth will win out. --Christine Buttery

Review

"'I cannot remember having read anything as intellectually deft on so ambitious a subject...an enthralling and delightful read'" (Independent)

"'It is rare to come across a book which seems so timely...a monumental effort...a feat of virtuosity and vitality'" (Literary Review)

"'A high-spirited vacation in a realm of dangerous ideas'" (The Times)

"'A sharp and interesting work, bound to enrage specialists in the fields he sprints through'" (New Statesman)

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