Abstract
Nicholas Smith argues that an adequate account of vagueness must involve\ndegrees of truth. The basic idea of degrees of truth is that while\nsome sentences are true and some are false, others possess intermediate\ntruth values: they are truer than the false sentences, but not as\ntrue as the true ones. This idea is immediately appealing in the\ncontext of vagueness--yet it has fallen on hard times in the philosophical\nliterature, with existing degree-theoretic treatments of vagueness\nfacing apparently insuperable objections. Smith seeks to turn the\ntide in favor of a degree-theoretic treatment of vagueness, by motivating\nand defending the basic idea that truth can come in degrees, by arguing\nthat no theory of vagueness that does not countenance degrees of\ntruth can be correct, and by developing a new degree-theoretic treatment\nof vagueness--fuzzy plurivaluationism--that solves the problems plaguing\nearlier degree theories