Abstract
Correspondence theories are frequently charged with being either
implausible -- metaphysically troubling and overly general -- or trivial --
collapsing into deflationism's "'P' is true iff P." Philip Kitcher argues
for a "modest" correspondence theory, on which reference relations are
causal relations, but there is no general theory of denotation. In this
paper, I start by showing that, understood this way, "modest" theories are
open to charges of triviality. I then offer a refinement of modesty, and
take the first steps toward articulating a modest correspondence theory,
giving a particular account of the relation between predicates,
properties, and extensions. Finally, I argue that my account does not
collapse into a deflationary one.