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7 J. Value Inquiry 1 (1973)

handle is hein.journals/jrnlvi7 and id is 1 raw text is: SUBJECTIVE TRUTH: A CRITIQUE

GARY E. OVERVOLD
This paper will examine the concept of subjective truth, indicating what
it can and can not sensibly mean. Although the paper is centrally concerned
with this concept, it also will serve to establish a point of textual interpre-
tation. Many critics of Kierkegaard have claimed he maintains a subjectivist
position on truth claims, that somehow what is true or false is simply a
matter of individual decision. H. J. Paton, for example, in The Modern
Predicament interprets Kierkegaard in this way.1 This interpretation is
mistaken and we can see why it is mistaken if we compare what Kierkegaard
says about truth and subjectivity with some interpretations of what sub-
jective truth might mean.
The concept of subjective truth has no established use and, thus, a
discussion of it is an exploration of possibility rather than fact. Or more
accurately, it is implied by attitudes which are very extensively found but
that implication has not been systematically formulated by the owners of
those attitudes. These attitudes collectively express the position of sub-
jectivism and subjective truth is the view on truth implied by, although not
confined to, that position.
The importance of the concept of subjective truth lies as much in its
intertwining in these attitudes as it does in its status as a theoretical possi-
bility. Simply as a concept it seemingly could be at home in any area where
truth is a relevant issue since it suggests a possibility of how truth could
be found in any area where truth can be found. But it is more pressing as
a problem related to actual beliefs and attitudes.
Subjectivism is a position which has never lacked for adherents and it
surely is not currently in a fallow period either. But seemingly few phi-
losophers have been among these advocates; it is a view of the layman
and not the professional. This situation complicates a discussion of the
related concept of subjective truth. Since the concept's adherents have
lacked the analytic and argumentative tools needed for its philosophical
formulation, one who would discuss it philosophically is required to be,
in a sense, both advocate and critic. He must both define the problem,
formulate the position, explore its meanings, and then present the criticisms
of his own work.
This paper is such an attempt. Because the concept is found inchoate,
I have given considerable space simply to the ordering of the various
possible meanings of the concept. And to put order into the exploration
I have adopted a division of the paper into four sections. First, I shall
1 H. J. Paton, The Modern Predicament (New York: Macmillan, 1955), pp. 120-121.

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