The Whole Truth and Nothing but the Truth (Susan Haack)
Believing at Will (Kieran Setiya)
Common Sense as Evidence: Against Revisionary Ontology and Skepticism (Thomas Kelly)
Why We Should Prefer Knowledge (Steven L. Reynolds)
Knowledge, Truth, and Bullshit: Reflections on Frankfurt (Erik J. Olsson)
Pragmatism on Solidarity, Bullshit, and other Deformities of Truth (Cheryl Misak)
Alethic Pluralism, Logical Consequence and the Universality of Reason (Michael P. Lynch)
Grading, Sorting, and the Sorites (Tim Maudlin)
Where the Paths Meet: Remarks on Truth and Paradox (JC Beall and Michael Glanzberg)
Pointless Truth (Jonathan Kvanvig).
Indeterminate Truth (Patrick Greenough).
Truth in Semantics (Max Kölbel).
Being and Truth (Paul Horwich).
Quine's Ladder: Two and a Half Pages from thePhilosophy of Logic (Marian David).
Truth-defi nitions and Defi nitional Truth (Douglas Patterson).
Howard K. Wettstein is Professor of Philosophy at the University of California, Riverside. He holds a B.A. degree in Philosophy from Yeshiva College, an M.A. and a Ph.D. from the City University of New York. Wettstein has published two books, The Magic Prism: An Essay in the Philosophy of Language (Oxford University Press, 2004) and Has Semantics Rested On a Mistake?, and Other Essays (Stanford University Press, 1991) and a number of papers in the philosophy of language, one focus of his research. Another and current focus is the philosophy of religion, publishing papers on topics like awe, doctrine, ritual, the problem of evil, and the viability of philosophical theology. He is currently at work on a book in the philosophy of religion. He is a senior editor (with Peter French) of Midwest Studies in Philosophy, and has edited a number of other volumes including Themes From Kaplan (Oxford University Press, 1989, co-edited) and Diasporas and Exiles: Varieties of Jewish Identity (University of California Press, 2002).