Abstract
»Alethic Pragmatism« is the seemingly complicated term for a rather trivial philosophical enterprise. Coined in allusion to Alston's »alethic realism,« alethic pragmatism calls attention not only to the propositional but also to the _procedural_ aspects of truth. Reaching back to the Peircean and Jamesian origins of pragmatism's tradition, this paper deciphers different _acts_ of verification, validation and truth-making. Special attention is devoted to alethic pragmatism's concept of facticity and validity. It is argued that one possible sense of bringing about truth could lie in the various performative linguistic, and scriptural acts determined to make propositions valid within a given system of beliefs or propositions