Quine s Two Dogmas of Empiricism. By Spencer Livingstone

Similar documents
Two Dogmas of Empiricism 1a

Each copy of any part of a JSTOR transmission must contain the same copyright notice that appears on the screen or printed page of such transmission.

TWO DOGMAS OF EMPIRICISM

The Philosophy of Language. Grice s Theory of Meaning

Sidestepping the holes of holism

Scientific Philosophy

PLEASE SCROLL DOWN FOR ARTICLE

LOGICO-SEMANTIC ASPECTS OF TRUTHFULNESS

On Meaning. language to establish several definitions. We then examine the theories of meaning

What is Character? David Braun. University of Rochester. In "Demonstratives", David Kaplan argues that indexicals and other expressions have a

138 Great Problems in Philosophy and Physics - Solved? Chapter 11. Meaning. This chapter on the web informationphilosopher.com/knowledge/meaning

THE PARADOX OF ANALYSIS

CONTINGENCY AND TIME. Gal YEHEZKEL

On The Search for a Perfect Language

1/6. The Anticipations of Perception

WHITEHEAD'S PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE AND METAPHYSICS

THE PROBLEM OF INTERPRETING MODAL LOGIC w. V. QUINE

Resemblance Nominalism: A Solution to the Problem of Universals. GONZALO RODRIGUEZ-PEREYRA. Oxford: Clarendon Press, Pp. xii, 238.

The topic of this Majors Seminar is Relativism how to formulate it, and how to evaluate arguments for and against it.

Bas C. van Fraassen, Scientific Representation: Paradoxes of Perspective, Oxford University Press, 2008.

1690-PALM PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE AND HISTORY OF SCIENCE

In his essay "Of the Standard of Taste," Hume describes an apparent conflict between two

Manuel Bremer University Lecturer, Philosophy Department, University of Düsseldorf, Germany

Immanuel Kant Critique of Pure Reason

observation and conceptual interpretation

PROBLEMS OF SEMANTICS

A Note on Analysis and Circular Definitions

Necessity in Kant; Subjective and Objective

Background to Gottlob Frege

ANALYSIS OF THE PREVAILING VIEWS REGARDING THE NATURE OF THEORY- CHANGE IN THE FIELD OF SCIENCE

1/10. The A-Deduction

Holism, Concept Individuation, and Conceptual Change

AN ALTERNATIVE TO KITCHER S THEORY OF CONCEPTUAL PROGRESS AND HIS ACCOUNT OF THE CHANGE OF THE GENE CONCEPT. Ingo Brigandt

The red apple I am eating is sweet and juicy. LOCKE S EMPIRICAL THEORY OF COGNITION: THE THEORY OF IDEAS. Locke s way of ideas

Frege: Two Theses, Two Senses

An Alternative to Kitcher s Theory of Conceptual Progress and His Account of the Change of the Gene Concept

Modeling Scientific Revolutions: Gärdenfors and Levi on the Nature of Paradigm Shifts

Mind Association. Oxford University Press and Mind Association are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Mind.

Logic and Philosophy of Science (LPS)

The Strengths and Weaknesses of Frege's Critique of Locke By Tony Walton

Replies to the Critics

that would join theoretical philosophy (metaphysics) and practical philosophy (ethics)?

Types of perceptual content

Kant: Notes on the Critique of Judgment

Meaning Change in the Context of Thomas S. Kuhn s Philosophy. Jouni-Matti Kuukkanen

Frege: Two Kinds of Meaning

Conclusion. One way of characterizing the project Kant undertakes in the Critique of Pure Reason is by

1/8. Axioms of Intuition

Internal Realism. Manuel Bremer University Lecturer, Philosophy Department, University of Düsseldorf, Germany

Conceptual Role Semantics and Naturalizing Meaning

Constructive mathematics and philosophy of mathematics

Unit 2. WoK 1 - Perception

On Articulting Reasons of Robert Brandom and His Hegelian Methodology

Habit, Semeiotic Naturalism, and Unity among the Sciences Aaron Wilson

Incommensurability and Partial Reference

Meaning and Action. The Significance of Activity and Anticipation in Intensional Semantics

The Language Revolution Russell Marcus Fall Class #7 Final Thoughts on Frege on Sense and Reference

CRITICAL STUDIES/BOOK REVIEWS

Philosophy 405: Knowledge, Truth and Mathematics Spring Russell Marcus Hamilton College

The Doctrine of the Mean

Improving Scientific Language

Questions from sample assessment materials with student responses and commentaries 2 and 5 mark items

What Can Experimental Philosophy Do? David Chalmers

Structural Realism, Scientific Change, and Partial Structures

Kuhn Formalized. Christian Damböck Institute Vienna Circle University of Vienna

KANTIAN CONCEPTUALISM

Pure and Applied Geometry in Kant

STRUCTURALISM AND INFORMATION OTA VIO BUENO

Faceted classification as the basis of all information retrieval. A view from the twenty-first century

RETURNING TO OUR SENSES

THINKING AT THE EDGE (TAE) STEPS

ATINER's Conference Paper Series LIT

Some of your examples for Mill s categories

The Aesthetic Idea and the Unity of Cognitive Faculties in Kant's Aesthetics

Action, Criticism & Theory for Music Education

Department of American Studies M.A. thesis requirements

Chapter One. Introduction to the Dissertation: Philosophy, Developmental Psychology, and Intuition

Chapter 9 Truth as Composite Correspondence

Intro to Pragmatics (Fox/Menéndez-Benito) 10/12/06. Questions 1

INTERPRETING FORMAL LOGIC *

TEST BANK. Chapter 1 Historical Studies: Some Issues

The Prenective View of propositional content

SCIENTIFIC CHANGE AND THE MEANINGS OF TERMS: AN EXAMINATION OF P. K. FEYERABEND'S INCOMMENSURABILITY THESIS

1/9. The B-Deduction

Khalidi, Conceptual Change in Science 2

Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at

expository/informative expository/informative

The Epistemological Status of Theoretical Simplicity YINETH SANCHEZ

The identity theory of truth and the realm of reference: where Dodd goes wrong

PHILOSOPH ICAL PERSPECTI VES ON PROOF IN MATHEMATI CS EDUCATION

For every sentences A and B, there is a sentence: A B,

Composition, Counterfactuals, Causation

Nissim Francez: Proof-theoretic Semantics College Publications, London, 2015, xx+415 pages

An Inquiry into the Metaphysical Foundations of Mathematics in Economics

Designing a Deductive Foundation System

Reply to Stalnaker. Timothy Williamson. In Models and Reality, Robert Stalnaker responds to the tensions discerned in Modal Logic

Are There Two Theories of Goodness in the Republic? A Response to Santas. Rachel Singpurwalla

INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ENGINEERING DESIGN ICED 05 MELBOURNE, AUGUST 15-18, 2005 GENERAL DESIGN THEORY AND GENETIC EPISTEMOLOGY

ARISTOTLE AND THE UNITY CONDITION FOR SCIENTIFIC DEFINITIONS ALAN CODE [Discussion of DAVID CHARLES: ARISTOTLE ON MEANING AND ESSENCE]

Penultimate draft of a review which will appear in History and Philosophy of. $ ISBN: (hardback); ISBN:

Transcription:

Quine s Two Dogmas of Empiricism By Spencer Livingstone

An Empiricist? Quine is actually an empiricist Goal of the paper not to refute empiricism through refuting its dogmas Rather, to cleanse empiricism Refute supposed bad (modern) empiricism for a better account of scientific empiricism

The Dogmas D1: There is some fundamental cleavage between truths which are analytic and truths which are synthetic (pg. 155). D2: Reductionism Each meaningful statement is equivalent to some logical construct upon terms which refer to immediate experience (pg. 155).

D1 Expounded Truth in general depends on both language and extralinguistic fact (163) Brutus killed Caesar Truth can be analyzed by its two components Language and extralinguistic facts In some statements, one needs only the language component These are the analytic statements

D2 Expounded Reductionism holds that statements are confirmed or disconfirmed individually As a function of experiences Logical empiricists held that statements meaning depends on the method used to verify it Found in logical positivism and Carnap s Aufbau (The Logical Structure of the World)

D2 Continued As long as it is taken to be significant in general to speak of the confirmation and infirmation of a statement, it seems significant to speak also of a limiting kind of statement which is vacuously confirmed and such a statement is analytic (Quine, 166) The belief that sense experience can be individually verified leads to the understanding that some statements an be confirmed come what may

Distinct Dogmas? The two dogmas are related intimately connected, at root identical Only if you can say that statements take their meaning individually as a function of their verification, can you say that some statements need not be verified empirically, but as a function of their components.

What is Analyticity? A Background Leibniz: truths of reason vs. truths of fact Truths of reason are true in all possible worlds Statements whose denials are self-contradictory Problem: explains little Self-contradictory is as poorly described as analyticity itself Kant: statements that attribute to their subjects no more than the subjects already contain True by virtue of meaning rather than of facts Necessitates explanation of meaning

Meanings Following after Frege and Russell, meaning is distinct from naming Evening Star; Morning Star Name the same thing (Venus); possess different meanings Meaning is crucial to the theory of synonymy and analyticity

Two Kinds of Analytic Statements (1) No unmarried man is married (2) No bachelor is married What is the difference between these two statements? Are they the same?

Two Kinds of Analytic Statements 1. Logical Contradictions LC: P ~P A contradiction in any instance of P, so long as P refers to the same thing in both instances The contradictoriness is obvious and explicit within the statement itself (1) No unmarried man is married ~( x)(~mx Mx) M and x can refer to anything, and the truth value of the statement is unaffected A contradiction in all cases

Two Kinds of Analytic Statements 2. Other analytic statements They are not intuitively self-contradictory, but we nonetheless consider them analytic (2) No bachelor is married ~( x)(bx Mx) Not a contradiction in itself Unless we know what B and M refer to Thus, the two kinds of analytic statements are distinct One that is true as a function of logical particles One that is true as a function of what?

Synonymy Can we restate (2) so as to turn it into the form used by (1)? Can we make No bachelor is married into a logical truth? We can, if we can show that bachelor and unmarried man are synonymous and therefore capable of being substituted for one another But can we show that?

We still lack a proper characterization of this second class of analytic statements, and therewith of analyticity generally, inasmuch as we have had in the above description to lean on a notion of synonymy which is no less in need of clarification than analyticity itself (Quine, 156).

The Case for Synonymy Turning (2) into (1) presupposes the existence and logical function of synonymy Thus, we need an explanation of synonymy to test its legitimacy Three possible characterizations of synonymy S1: Meaning postulates S2: Definitions S3: Interchangeability

S1: Meaning Postulates The understanding that a given thing can be defined in terms of its relation to other things Can create axioms (semantic rules) ( x) (Bx Ξ Ux) Atomic sentences: true or false declarative sentences that cannot be broken down into simpler components Becomes a state-description once it bears a particular truth value Using logical particles and semantic rules, can build complex sentences Analytic sentences are those that will be true for every state-description Semantic rules permit substitutions (2) into (1)

Quine s Response to S1 Meaning postulates do not help to explain analyticity Presenting a list of semantic rules for synonymy provides a definition for analyticity in a given language Not language itself By defining statements as analytic due to adherence to semantic rules, we need to know what we are ascribing to them

Quine s Response to S1 Semantic rules can tell us which sentences are analytic Does not help explain the ascribing Semantic rules can also identify which sentences are among the truths It therefore defines analyticity as true according to the semantic rules Provides no explanation for what exactly semantic rules are or why they are significant By saying what statements are analytic for L 0 we explain analytic for L 0 but not analytic, not analytic for (Quine, 162).

S2: Definitions & Quine s Response S2: Analytic statements are true by definition. Words that possess identical definitions are therefore synonymous Where do we find definitions? Are we to appeal to the nearest dictionary, and accept the lexicographer s formulation as law? Clearly this would be to put the cart before the horse. The lexicographer is an empirical scientist, whose business is the recording of antecedent facts (Quine, 157) In searching for an explanation for synonymy, we cannot rely on an explanation that presuppose synonymy

S3: Interchangeability The synonymy of two linguistic forms consists simply in their interchangeability in all contexts without change of truth value (Quine, 159). Salva veritate (Leibniz) Thus, synonyms are terms that can be exchanged in any given use of the term without a change in truth value Can therefore substitute bachelor for unmarried man to turn (2) into (1)

Quine s Cheap Responses to S3 (1) No unmarried man is married (2) No bachelor is married So it seems bachelor unmarried man (3) I have a bachelor of arts diploma (4) Bachelor has less than ten letters

Quine s Proper Response to S3 Cognitive synonymy more precise version of synonymy Information that a term expresses such that it is synonymous with a different term s cognitive meaning Not looking for why no bachelor is married is true, but why it is analytical like (1) An explanation of the intensional (analytic) in extensional terms Since an intensional explanation is circular But a purely extensional language would create erroneous extensions Since would allow interchangeability of all coextensive terms

So Is D1 False? 1. For an analytic/synthetic distinction, we must be able to explain synonymy 2. We can only explain synonymy by interchangeability or definition 3. Interchangeability cannot explain synonymy 4. Definition cannot explain synonymy C. There is no analytic/synthetic distinction Logical truths remain

D2 Revisited D2: Reductionism Each meaningful statement is equivalent to some logical construct upon terms which refer to immediate experience (pg. 155).

The Verification Theory of Reductionism What is a term s meaning? How is it acquired? Verification Theory of Reductionism: The meaning of a statement is the method of confirming or infirming it. An analytic statement is that limiting case which is confirmed no matter what (Quine, 164). Thus, statements can be synonymous iff their methods of empirical confirmation or infirmation are identical Can we save D1?

Quine Against D2 The dogma of reductionism survives in the supposition that each statement, taken in isolation from its fellows, can admit of confirmation or infirmation at all but our statements about the external world face the tribunal of sense experience not individually but only as a corporate body (Quine, 166).

Quine s Holism Individual statements do not possess a distinct linguistic component and a factual component Rather, they are double dependent Cannot use one without the other The unit of empirical significance is the whole of science (Quine, 166) Without an analytic/synthetic distinction, there are no sentences that hold come what may All ideas are confirmed or discomfirmed as a whole (confirmation holism) We can hold onto whatever statement, so long as we revise other statements and logical components to avoid contrary experience

Semantic Holism The unit of meaning is the entire language Meaning arises from the cohesive theory that best accounts for all of our sense experience Web of Belief Sense experiences are peripheral statements Logic, mathematics, etc. are central statements When we make adjustments to statements according to experiences, we do not do so one sentence at a time, but altogether Every belief is capable of being abandoned; no belief is immune from revision; no sentence is ever decisively refuted

Holism s Repercussions to Ontology No experience is tied to any particular statement Must determine our ontology by appeal to the whole of science We scientifically posit some things taken as existent (objects at the atomic level, etc.) All our experiences of physical objects are of the same kind

What Does This Mean? Yes, even logical laws can be revised A precedent of logical/scientific laws being reevaluated and refined Newtonian physics in favor of Einsteinian physics Science is not so much after truth as a prediction of future experiences For Quine, changes in our web of belief our science are pragmatic

The Verdict? Which is superior? Quine s theory of semantic holism Meanings arise from a web of sensory experience Every statement is susceptible to refutation or change, so long as we change other statements for compatibility Verification theory of reductionism Meanings arise from individual sensory experiences that either confirm or disconfirm statements.