Summary |
Coherence theories of truth identify truth as consisting in coherence with other members of a set. Particularly, a proposition or belief is considered true if and only if it fits with every other proposition or belief in the system to which they all belong, without logically contradicting any of them. The truth of a proposition, therefore, consists in other propositions/beliefs, as opposed to in non-propositional items such as features of the world. Truth is a property of any one proposition only derivatively, by virtue of that proposition's belonging to a coherent set of propositions. Notable variance and disagreement between coherence theories concerns the nature, scope and unity/multiplicity of the set with which a given proposition must cohere to derive its truth. The coherence theory opposes the correspondence theory, which is its chief competitor; together, they comprise the two traditional theories of truth. |