In this provocative and wide-ranging book, Michael Devitt argues for a
thoroughgoing realism about the common-sense and scientific physical
world, and for a correspondence notion of truth. Furthermore, he argues
that, contrary to received opinion, the metaphysical question of realism
is distinct from, and prior to, any semantic question about truth. The
book makes incisive responses to Putnam, Dummett, van Fraassen, and
other major anti-realists. The new afterword includes an extensive
discussion of the metaphysics of nonfactualism, and new thoughts on the
need for truth and on the determination of reference.