Pragmatism and the philosophy of language

Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 55 (3):501-523 (1995)
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Abstract

After sketching familiar pragmatist arguments that seem to show that relations of reference and meaning shed no light on the role of language in our claims to knowledge, an alternative conception (inspired by Kripke's work on proper names and Sellars' conception of concepts and causal laws) is outlined. Neither relations of reference nor meanings are given; instead both essentially involve commitments that are different in kind from the sorts of propositional commitments made in judgment. If so, the pragmatist is mistaken in concluding that meaning is a philosopher's fiction and reference nothing more than a technical notion of formal semantics

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Danielle Macbeth
Haverford College

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