Abstract
Revenge arguments purport to show that any proposed solution to the semantic paradoxes generates new paradoxes that prove that solution to be inadequate. In this paper, I focus on revenge arguments that employ the model-theoretic semantics of a target theory and I argue, contra the current revenge-theoretic wisdom, that they can constitute genuine expressive limitations. I consider the anti-revenge strategy elaborated by Field (J Philos Log 32:139–177, 2003; Revenge of the Liar, Oxford University Press, Oxford, pp 53–144, 2007; Saving truth from paradox, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2008, §§21–23) and argue that it does not offer a way out of the revenge problem. More generally, I argue that the difference between 'standard' and 'revenge' paradoxes is ill-conceived and should be abandoned. This will contribute to show that the theories that provide a uniform account of truth and other semantic notions are the ones best equipped to avoid the paradoxes altogether—'standard' and 'revenge' alike.
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