Hall, Bradford & Bulaqueña, Marlon: Truth Is Not a Property of Propositions: Why the very bearer of truth has been misidentified for 2,500 years

For more than two millennia, philosophical theories of truth have been divided by a common question: what makes a proposition true? Whether truth is understood as correspondence with facts, coherence within a system of beliefs, pragmatic success, identity with reality, superassertibility, or merely a logical device of disquotation, virtually every major theory shares a deeper and largely unquestioned assumption—that propositions, sentences, beliefs, or statements are the primary bearers of truth