The difference between this way of looking at truth and the criterial conception defended here is that truth criteria cannot be defeasible. It is a characteristic of criteria that they are decisive in determining whether a proposition or statement is true or false. If they were not, then we would need some other way of determining truth (Ellenbogen 2003). Criteria are objective in the sense that they hold independently of whether any group, authoritative or not, make judgements that are not in accord with them. But they do need to have general acceptance within a practice for that practice to be viable. The criteria for determining the truth of propositions may well vary from practice to practice. The criterion for determining the truth of whether or not a school building is of a certain age will differ from the criterion for determining whether or not a particular assessment practice is worth retaining, for example. So in practice both educational practices and research into those practices will depend on different criteria, a reflection of a broader diversity in criteria within assertoric practices more generally. In particular, it is the responsibility of educational researchers to adopt criteria which can deal with the largest possible range of possible defeaters of judgements. They also have a responsibility to take seriously and to try to understand the criteria for truth adopted by those whom they are researching.
Although truth criteria are objective because they are independent of the judgement of individuals and groups and are indefeasible, it is also the case that they are in principle and practice revisable. New criteria can be adopted and old ones abandoned as science and systematic enquiry progresses. The history of science is testament enough to the adoption of new and the abandonment of old truth criteria, as different techniques of measurement and their underlying rationale establish themselves. As Ellenbogen puts it, investigation can reveal that our criteria for what is true and for what is real may come apart at times. ‘We should revise our picture of the meaning of “is true” as being independent of our current knowledge; this is a use which we should reserve for “is real”’ (p. 116). Our picture of the meaning of ‘is true’ is a philosophical picture in which ‘is true’ and ‘is real’ tend to get conflated. Acknowledging this does not damage the objectivity of judgements made according to established criteria. All it does is to withdraw the implicit claim made by some philosophers that ‘is true’ is a contraction of ‘is true for all time and in all circumstances’ or the claim that ‘is true’ is equivalent to ‘corresponds with reality’. If this expansion of ‘is true’ is accepted then little that we hold to be true would in fact count as such and the concept would have little use for us. What we rightly count as true now may not be counted as true later when judged according to different criteria. But we don’t make the commitment that it should be, when we make an assertion. We make the assertion against the background of criteria that we take to be valid at the time.
One line of argument from a pragmatist perspective might be to substitute the concept of warranted assertibility for that of truth (Dewey 1941). We thus escape the seeming paradox that arises from the rejection of the timelessness of truth. However, this is not really a solution. Someone who asserts a proposition or makes a statement usually sincerely believes it to be the case, in other words, to believe that it is true. Propositions are those linguistic items that are taken to be true or false. ‘Warranted assertibility’ seems to move away from being a truth claim, but this is only appearance; we cannot dispense with the concept of truth in our understanding of the world so easily. Thus to put p forward is already to acknowledge that it is capable of being true or false (Stoutland 1998).
But there is another reason for suspicion concerning substantive theories of truth that claim to provide an explanation of what truth is. This is best seen in relation to the correspondence theory, which seems to underlie the difficulties that many educational researchers have in accepting a single reality. To say that p is true is to say that p corresponds with some aspect of reality, say a state of affairs (Wittgenstein 1921). This is an explanation of what ‘p is true’ means, that is, it is supposed to increase our understanding of what it is for p to be true. But is this a real explanation? Consider the following argument:
1 For all p, p is true if and only if (iff) p corresponds to some S.
2 p is true iff p corresponds to S.
3 Call p corresponds to S: q.
4 q is true iff q corresponds to T.
5 Call q corresponds to T: r.
6 r is true iff r corresponds to U .
As an explanation of correspondence this leads to a vicious regress in which ‘corresponds to’ cannot be eliminated from the explanation. The idea, therefore, that EER is an attempt to reach correspondence with reality should be rejected. In fact, the argument is stronger than that. It holds for any substantive theory of truth, be it coherence, pragmatism or the Fregean naming theory. Consider E as the explanans (explainer) of what makes any proposition true.
1 p is true iff pE.
2 pE is true iff (pE)E.
3 (pE)E is true iff ((pE)E)E.
And so on. Clearly E has to be invoked both as explanandum (thing to be explained) and explanans (explainer) in the expansion of the explanation of what it means to say that p is true. Thus any attempt to provide explanations of what it means to say that a claim about an educational practice is true, be it from a correspondence, coherence, pragmatist or Fregean perspective will not work. We need to approach the question of educational truth in a different way.
On the face of it, a criterial account of truth would fail on the general argument. A criterial account holds that
p is true iff the relevant criteria for p’s being true actually hold.
However, this is not an explanation like the other examples, because it is transparently circular. It is not an explanation of what ‘p is true’ actually means and could not be because it mentions truth in the explanans. Rather, it is better seen as an invitation to look at the ways in which truth is ascribed and there may be numerous different criteria for doing so, depending on the epistemic practice that we are concerned with. Very often, these criteria although different, may be applied to a complex phenomenon with different dimensions, the effective (or otherwise) working of schools being an example. If the application of different criteria to different aspects of the same phenomenon yield converging results, we can take that as grounds for gaining a better understanding of the different aspects of the phenomenon and thus make a closer approach to reality than we otherwise would (Peirce 1931–1958). Each sub-investigation using different criteria yields results that are not only consistent, but illuminate different aspects of the whole phenomenon in such a way for each aspect to shed light on the other. This can also be an iterative process whereby convergence is achieved through reflection on initial results (Schoonenboom 2018). We shall see in Chapter 4 how good explanations can be constructed from mutually complementary lines of enquiry. The coherence lies in the explanatory network rather than the propositions that compose individual lines of explanation, although the latter must also satisfy minimal standards of consistency.
The so-called redundancy theory of truth claims that
p is true means no more than p.
It is not an attempt to explain what it is for p to be true, suggesting instead that there is no explanation.4 Redundancy leaves it open as to which criterion should be adopted for determining the truth of any proposition or statement. This must be settled by a specification or investigation of the criteria in use in a given practice and applies not only to the practices of the