Abstract
In his “Making it Explicit”,1 Robert Brandom set up a new philosophical paradigm, concentrating especially on the link between language and the world, but extendable (in the way familiar from the dawn of the linguistic turn) to the rest of philosophy. He views modern philosophy in terms of the tension between “representationalist” and “inferentialist” approaches to language (which, according to him, also underlies the much more commonly cited struggle between empiricism and rationalism); and elaborating on the ideas of his teacher Wilfrid Sellars he develops a distinctive kind of inferentialist framework.