In this dissertation, I argue that we should be pluralists about truth and in turn, eliminativists about the property truth. Traditional deflationists were right to suspect that there is no such property as truth. Yet there is a plurality of pluralities of properties which enjoy defining features that truth would have, were it to exist. So although, in this sense, truth is plural, truth is non-existent. The resulting account of truth is indebted to deflationism as the provenance of the suspicion that truth doesn\u27t exist. But it would be hasty to simply classify the account as deflationary. Each of the \u27truth-like\u27 properties that it recognizes is highly substantive--that is, complex and explanatorily potent. So we should deflate tr...