Communities of Dialogue Russian and Ukrainian Émigrés in Modernist Prague

Repository | Journal | Volume | Article

235970

In defense of true higher-order vagueness

Susanne Bobzien

pp. 317-335

Abstract

Stewart Shapiro recently argued that there is no higher-order vagueness. More specifically, his thesis is: (ST) ‘So-called second-order vagueness in ‘F’ is nothing but first-order vagueness in the phrase ‘competent speaker of English’ or ‘competent user of “F”’. Shapiro bases (ST) on a description of the phenomenon of higher-order vagueness and two accounts of ‘borderline case’ and provides several arguments in its support. We present the phenomenon (as Shapiro describes it) and the accounts; then discuss Shapiro’s arguments, arguing that none is compelling. Lastly, we introduce the account of vagueness Shapiro would have obtained had he retained compositionality and show that it entails true higher-order.

Publication details

Published in:

(2011) Synthese 180 (3).

Pages: 317-335

DOI: 10.1007/s11229-009-9704-8

Full citation:

Bobzien Susanne (2011) „In defense of true higher-order vagueness“. Synthese 180 (3), 317–335.