Truth and Truthfulness, Bernard Williams
Truth and Truthfulness, Bernard Williams
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Truth and Truthfulness

Author: Bernard Williams

Narrator: Ralph Cosham

Unabridged: 10 hr 42 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 07/16/2010


Synopsis

What does it mean to be truthful? What role does truth play in our lives? What do we lose if we reject truthfulness? No philosopher is better suited to answer these questions than Bernard Williams. Writing with his characteristic combination of passion and elegant simplicity, he explores the value of truth and finds it to be both less and more than we might imagine. Modern culture exhibits two attitudes toward truth: suspicion of being deceived (no one wants to be fooled) and skepticism that objective truth exists at all (no one wants to be naive). This tension between a demand for truthfulness and the doubt that there is any truth to be found is not an abstract paradox. It has political consequences and signals a danger that our intellectual activities, particularly in the humanities, may tear themselves to pieces.Williams's approach, in the tradition of Nietzsche's genealogy, blends philosophy, history, and a fictional account of how the human concern with truth might have arisen. Without denying that we should worry about the contingency of much that we take for granted, he defends truth as an intellectual objective and a cultural value. He identifies two basic virtues of truth, Accuracy and Sincerity, the first of which aims at finding out the truth and the second at telling it. He describes different psychological and social forms that these virtues have taken and asks what ideas can make best sense of them today.Truth and Truthfulness presents a powerful challenge to the fashionable belief that truth has no value, but equally to the traditional faith that its value guarantees itself. Bernard Williams shows us that when we lose a sense of the value of truth, we lose a lot, both politically and personally, and may well lose everything.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Alina on January 23, 2022

(Review from 2nd time reading) This was an extraordinary read. Williams is very innovative and insightful; his literary style is rhetorically powerful and yet rigorous and precise; and reading this inspired me to go off on ideas and enabled me to develop my thinking in a way that the vast majority of......more

Goodreads review by Josh on January 06, 2024

I recall enjoying this in grad school, but when I went back to it years later it reminded me why I quit grad school.......more

Goodreads review by Otto on February 12, 2025

Williams is best known for his witty and insightful - if often perplexing, frustrating, and slippery - essays on practical reason, relativism, blame, utilitarianism, and other diverse topics. He is not exactly known as a systematic philosopher. Indeed, the idea of a "system" tends to appear as a tar......more

Goodreads review by Raymond on October 31, 2022

This unique work on truth is a study of the paired concept of truth and truthfulness using a Nietzschian style of genealogy in moral philosophy. Williams utilised an unusual blend of analytic moral philosophy, classical study, and historical perspective which produced a work that is richly densed in......more

Goodreads review by Siu on January 17, 2021

I listened to the audiobook version. While clearly read, which was all it needed to be, the audiobook was not the best way to understand the book because of how much denser it was written, compared to Micheal Sandel's Tyranny of Merit (which read like a well-organized lecture series). I have the imp......more