ABSTRACT

Published in 1998, the philosophical concern of this book is epistemological in kind. It involves understanding the Socratic elentic method and how its structure introduces an important epistemological problem which is first raised in the "Meno" dialogue as a paradox. This paradox, named the Meno paradox, raises the problem of falsehood. Specifically the impossibility of falsehood. The "Theaetetus" dialogue is then analyzed in terms of how falsehood is there set up as a clearly epistemological problem. The "Sophist" dialogue is in turn discussed as offering a response to the problem of falsehood by revising it as a problem for semantics.

chapter |18 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|48 pages

The Meno

chapter 2|55 pages

The Theaetetus and False Belief

chapter 3|24 pages

False Belief in the Theaetetus

chapter 4|38 pages

False Belief in the Sophist

chapter 5|30 pages

Resolving Falsehood

chapter |8 pages

Conclusion