The Rule-Following Paradox and its Implications for Metaphysics

Cham: Springer Verlag (2017)
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Abstract

This monograph presents Azzouni’s new approach to the rule-following paradox. His solution leaves intact an isolated individual’s capacity to follow rules, and it simultaneously avoids replacing the truth conditions for meaning-talk with mere assertability conditions for that talk. Kripke’s influential version of Wittgenstein’s rule-following paradox—and Wittgenstein’s views more generally—on the contrary, make rule-following practices and assertions about those practices subject to community norms without which they lose their cogency. Azzouni summarizes and develops Kripke’s original version of Wittgenstein’s rule-following paradox to make salient the linchpin assumptions of the paradox. By doing so, Azzouni reveals how compelling Kripke’s earlier work on the paradox was. Objections raised over the years by Fodor, Forbes Ginsborg, Goldfarb, Tait, Wright, and many others, are all shown to fail. No straight solution can be made to work. Azzouni illustrates this in detail by showing that a popular family of straight solutions due to Lewis and refined by Williams, “reference magnetism,” fail as well. And yet an overlooked sceptical solution is still available in logical space. Azzouni describes a series of “disposition-meaning” private languages that he shows can be successfully used by a population of speakers to communicate with one another despite their ideolectical character. The same sorts of languages enable solitary “Robinson Crusoes” to survive and flourish in their island habitats. These languages—sufficiently refined—have the same properties normal human languages have; and this is the key to solving the rule-following paradox without sacrificing the individual’s authority over her self-imposed rules or her ability to follow those rules. Azzouni concludes this unusual monograph by uncovering a striking resemblance between the rule-following paradox and Hume’s problem of induction: he shows the rule-following paradox to be a corollary of Hume’s problem that arises when the problem of induction is applied to an individual’s own abilities to follow rules.

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Chapters

How Positive Success Curves Enable Private Rule Following

Two more isolated rule-following Robinson Crusoes are discussed. Crusoe 4 still recognizes himself to be speaking a disposition-meaning language because he has introspective access to the dispositions that generate his meaning-urges. But because those dispositions change relatively continuously, he ... see more

General Introduction

A summary of the entire book is given. Apart from descriptions of the contents of each chapter, several additional methodological points are made. I give reasons to avoid, as tools of philosophical analysis, concepts such as “understanding,” “meaning,” and “fact.” I also describe some significant di... see more

Truth and Falsity Attributions and Truth-Conditional Semantics in Private Languages

I continue to explore the language of Crusoe 5, an isolated rule-follower. I show that his language, just like our language, can sustain the use of truth and falsity attributions. That is, it is useful to Crusoe 5, just as it is useful to us, to be able to say that certain groups of statements are t... see more

Two Versions of Robinson Crusoe

This chapter begins the analysis of the rule-following problem by the use of disposition-languages, languages with terms that apply exactly the way subjects are disposed to apply them. It’s shown that if empirical circumstances are felicitous enough, isolated subjects can engage in successful rule-f... see more

Reference Magnetism

The influential response of David Lewis to the rule-following problem is described. Three distinct approaches are traced to Lewis’s seminal papers. The first treats the world’s structure as metaphysically providing resources that supplement what individuals have to determine reference. Our words hav... see more

Kripke’s Version of Wittgenstein’s Paradox and His Solution

This chapter reviews Kripke’s original description of Wittgenstein’s paradox and its solution. Quite a bit of critical commentary has engaged with Kripke’s interpretation; but I’m not concerned with whether Kripke’s interpretation of Wittgenstein is right; I’m only concerned with Kripke’s puzzle, as... see more

Correspondence Metaphysics and the Cogency of a God’s Eye View

This chapter addresses two remaining issues. The first is the apprehension that in undercutting reference-magnetism views the way I have, I’ve ruled out the possibility that the way the world sorts out for us empirically could be compatible with some version of correspondence metaphysics—an empirica... see more

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Jody Azzouni
Tufts University

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