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Timothy Williamson

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Timothy Williamson is a British philosopher known for his defense of epistemicism — the view that vagueness is a form of ignorance rather than indeterminacy — and for his broader contributions to philosophical logic, epistemology, and metaphysics. His 1994 book Vagueness argued that vague predicates have sharp boundaries that are unknowable due to the margins of error in human cognition, a position that preserves classical logic at the cost of accepting in-principle unknowable truths. Williamson has also been a central figure in the philosophy of modality, defending the thesis that modal claims are grounded in facts about the nature of objects rather than in possible worlds. His work represents a sustained commitment to realism in metaphysics and precision in philosophical method, making him a frequent target of critics who argue that his insistence on hidden precision confuses linguistic indeterminacy with epistemic failure.

Williamson's project is to make philosophy look like mathematics. The question is whether the world cooperates.