Andrea Bonomi’s “Non-persistent truths” is a grown-up version of his “Revisable truths” (2016). Like its ancestor, the present paper is for me both heartening and disheartening. For if on the one side Bonomi has no doubts as to the truth-value stability of statements concerning the past, on the other side he is pretty convinced, and well set to convince us, of the truth-value instability of statements concerning the future. I will try in the sequel to show how to get rid of the delusive latter sort of instability. Before that, let me note that to proclaim the truth-value stability both for statements about the past and statements about the future is not ipso facto to proclaim the symmetry of past and future. Between the past and the future there is the hell of a difference that there is between having died and never being born, between having been the case and not having been the case. On the past there are records, memories, traces. On the future none of the above but only forecasts, previsions, hypotheses, guesses. The point is that…
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