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Meaning (philosophy)

In philosophy—more specifically, in its sub-fields semantics, semiotics, philosophy of language, metaphysics, and metasemanticsmeaning "is a relationship between two sorts of things: signs and the kinds of things they intend, express, or signify".[1]

The types of meanings vary according to the types of the thing that is being represented. There are:

  • the things, which might have meaning;
  • things that are also signs of other things, and therefore are always meaningful (i.e., natural signs of the physical world and ideas within the mind);
  • things that are necessarily meaningful, such as words and nonverbal symbols.

The major contemporary positions of meaning come under the following partial definitions of meaning:

Truth and meaning edit

The question of what is a proper basis for deciding how words, symbols, ideas and beliefs may properly be considered to truthfully denote meaning, whether by a single person or by an entire society, has been considered by five major types of theory of meaning and truth.[2][3][4] Each type is discussed below, together with its principal exponents.[2][5][6]

Substantive theories of meaning edit

Correspondence theory edit

Correspondence theories emphasise that true beliefs and true statements of meaning correspond to the actual state of affairs and that associated meanings must be in agreement with these beliefs and statements.[7] This type of theory stresses a relationship between thoughts or statements on one hand, and things or objects on the other. It is a traditional model tracing its origins to ancient Greek philosophers such as Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle.[8] This class of theories holds that the truth or the falsity of a representation is determined in principle entirely by how it relates to "things", by whether it accurately describes those "things". An example of correspondence theory is the statement by the thirteenth-century philosopher/theologian Thomas Aquinas: Veritas est adaequatio rei et intellectus ("Truth is the equation [or adequation] of things and intellect"), a statement which Aquinas attributed to the ninth-century neoplatonist Isaac Israeli.[9][10][11] Aquinas also restated the theory as: "A judgment is said to be true when it conforms to the external reality".[12]

Correspondence theory centres heavily around the assumption that truth and meaning are a matter of accurately copying what is known as "objective reality" and then representing it in thoughts, words and other symbols.[13] Many modern theorists have stated that this ideal cannot be achieved without analysing additional factors.[2][14] For example, language plays a role in that all languages have words to represent concepts that are virtually undefined in other languages. The German word Zeitgeist is one such example: one who speaks or understands the language may "know" what it means, but any translation of the word apparently fails to accurately capture its full meaning (this is a problem with many abstract words, especially those derived in agglutinative languages). Thus, some words add an additional parameter to the construction of an accurate truth predicate. Among the philosophers who grappled with this problem is Alfred Tarski, whose semantic theory is summarized further below in this article.[15]

Coherence theory edit

For coherence theories in general, the assessment of meaning and truth requires a proper fit of elements within a whole system. Very often, though, coherence is taken to imply something more than simple logical consistency; often there is a demand that the propositions in a coherent system lend mutual inferential support to each other. So, for example, the completeness and comprehensiveness of the underlying set of concepts is a critical factor in judging the validity and usefulness of a coherent system.[16] A pervasive tenet of coherence theories is the idea that truth is primarily a property of whole systems of propositions, and can be ascribed to individual propositions only according to their coherence with the whole. Among the assortment of perspectives commonly regarded as coherence theory, theorists differ on the question of whether coherence entails many possible true systems of thought or only a single absolute system.

Some variants of coherence theory are claimed to describe the essential and intrinsic properties of formal systems in logic and mathematics.[17] However, formal reasoners are content to contemplate axiomatically independent and sometimes mutually contradictory systems side by side—for example, the various alternative geometries. On the whole, coherence theories have been rejected for lacking justification in their application to other areas of truth—especially with respect to assertions about the natural world, empirical data in general, assertions about practical matters of psychology and society—particularly when used without support from the other major theories of truth.[18]

Coherence theories distinguish the thought of rationalist philosophers, particularly of Spinoza, Leibniz, and G.W.F. Hegel, along with the British philosopher F.H. Bradley.[19] Other alternatives may be found among several proponents of logical positivism, notably Otto Neurath and Carl Hempel.

Constructivist theory edit

Social constructivism holds that meaning and truth are constructed by social processes, are historically and culturally specific, and are in part shaped through power struggles within a community. Constructivism views all of our knowledge as "constructed", because it does not reflect any external "transcendent" realities (as a pure correspondence theory might hold). Rather, perceptions of truth are viewed as contingent on convention, human perception, and social experience. It is believed by constructivists that representations of physical and biological reality, including race, sexuality, and gender, are socially constructed.

Giambattista Vico was among the first to claim that history and culture, along with their meaning, are human products. Vico's epistemological orientation gathers the most diverse rays and unfolds in one axiom – verum ipsum factum – "truth itself is constructed". Hegel and Marx were among the other early proponents of the premise that truth is, or can be, socially constructed. Marx, like many critical theorists who followed, did not reject the existence of objective truth but rather distinguished between true knowledge and knowledge that has been distorted through power or ideology. For Marx, scientific and true knowledge is "in accordance with the dialectical understanding of history" and ideological knowledge is "an epiphenomenal expression of the relation of material forces in a given economic arrangement".[20]

Consensus theory edit

Consensus theory holds that meaning and truth are whatever is agreed upon—or, in some versions, might come to be agreed upon—by some specified group. Such a group might include all human beings, or a subset thereof consisting of more than one person.

Among the current advocates of consensus theory as a useful accounting of the concept of "truth" is the philosopher Jürgen Habermas.[21] Habermas maintains that truth is what would be agreed upon in an ideal speech situation.[22] Among the current strong critics of consensus theory is the philosopher Nicholas Rescher.[23]

Pragmatic theory edit

The three most influential forms of the pragmatic theory of truth and meaning were introduced around the turn of the 20th century by Charles Sanders Peirce, William James, and John Dewey. Although there are wide differences in viewpoint among these and other proponents of pragmatic theory, they hold in common that meaning and truth are verified and confirmed by the results of putting one's concepts into practice.[24]

Peirce defines truth as follows: "Truth is that concordance of an abstract statement with the ideal limit towards which endless investigation would tend to bring scientific belief, which concordance the abstract statement may possess by virtue of the confession of its inaccuracy and one-sidedness, and this confession is an essential ingredient of truth."[25] This statement stresses Peirce's view that ideas of approximation, incompleteness, and partiality, what he describes elsewhere as fallibilism and "reference to the future", are essential to a proper conception of meaning and truth. Although Peirce uses words like concordance and correspondence to describe one aspect of the pragmatic sign relation, he is also quite explicit in saying that definitions of truth based on mere correspondence are no more than nominal definitions, which he accords a lower status than real definitions.

William James's version of pragmatic theory, while complex, is often summarized by his statement that "the 'true' is only the expedient in our way of thinking, just as the 'right' is only the expedient in our way of behaving".[26] By this, James meant that truth is a quality, the value of which is confirmed by its effectiveness when applying concepts to practice (thus, "pragmatic").

John Dewey, less broadly than James but more broadly than Peirce, held that inquiry, whether scientific, technical, sociological, philosophical or cultural, is self-corrective over time if openly submitted for testing by a community of inquirers in order to clarify, justify, refine and/or refute proposed meanings and truths.[27]

A later variation of the pragmatic theory was William Ernest Hocking's "negative pragmatism": what works may or may not be true, but what fails cannot be true, because the truth and its meaning always works.[28] James's and Dewey's ideas also ascribe meaning and truth to repeated testing, which is "self-corrective" over time.

Pragmatism and negative pragmatism are also closely aligned with the coherence theory of truth in that any testing should not be isolated but rather incorporate knowledge from all human endeavors and experience. The universe is a whole and integrated system, and testing should acknowledge and account for its diversity. As physicist Richard Feynman said: "if it disagrees with experiment, it is wrong".[29]

Associated theories and commentaries edit

Some have asserted that meaning is nothing substantially more or less than the truth conditions they involve. For such theories, an emphasis is placed upon reference to actual things in the world to account for meaning, with the caveat that reference more or less explains the greater part (or all) of meaning itself.

Logic and language edit

The logical positivists argued that the meaning of a statement arose from how it is verified.

Gottlob Frege edit

In his paper "Über Sinn und Bedeutung" (now usually translated as "On Sense and Reference"), Gottlob Frege argued that proper names present at least two problems in explaining meaning.

  1. Suppose the meaning of a name is the thing it refers to. Sam, then, means a person in the world who is named Sam. But if the object referred to by the name did not exist—i.e., Pegasus—then, according to that theory, it would be meaningless.
  2. Suppose two different names refer to the same object. Hesperus and Phosphorus were the names given to what were considered distinct celestial bodies. It was later shown that they were the same thing (the planet Venus). If the words meant the same thing, then substituting one for the other in a sentence would not result in a sentence that differs in meaning from the original. But in that case, "Hesperus is Phosphorus" would mean the same thing as "Hesperus is Hesperus". This is clearly absurd, since we learn something new and unobvious by the former statement, but not by the latter.

Frege can be interpreted as arguing that it was therefore a mistake to think that the meaning of a name is the thing it refers to. Instead, the meaning must be something else—the "sense" of the word. Two names for the same person, then, can have different senses (or meanings): one referent might be picked out by more than one sense. This sort of theory is called a mediated reference theory. Frege argued that, ultimately, the same bifurcation of meaning must apply to most or all linguistic categories, such as to quantificational expressions like "All boats float".

Bertrand Russell edit

Logical analysis was further advanced by Bertrand Russell and Alfred North Whitehead in their groundbreaking Principia Mathematica, which attempted to produce a formal language with which the truth of all mathematical statements could be demonstrated from first principles.

Russell differed from Frege greatly on many points, however. He rejected Frege's sense-reference distinction. He also disagreed that language was of fundamental significance to philosophy, and saw the project of developing formal logic as a way of eliminating all of the confusions caused by ordinary language, and hence at creating a perfectly transparent medium in which to conduct traditional philosophical argument. He hoped, ultimately, to extend the proofs of the Principia to all possible true statements, a scheme he called logical atomism. For a while it appeared that his pupil Wittgenstein had succeeded in this plan with his Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus.

Russell's work, and that of his colleague G. E. Moore, developed in response to what they perceived as the nonsense dominating British philosophy departments at the turn of the 20th century, which was a kind of British Idealism most of which was derived (albeit very distantly) from the work of Hegel. In response Moore developed an approach ("Common Sense Philosophy"[30]) which sought to examine philosophical difficulties by a close analysis of the language used in order to determine its meaning. In this way Moore sought to expunge philosophical absurdities such as "time is unreal". Moore's work would have significant, if oblique, influence (largely mediated by Wittgenstein) on Ordinary language philosophy.

Other truth theories of meaning edit

The Vienna Circle, a famous group of logical positivists from the early 20th century (closely allied with Russell and Frege), adopted the verificationist theory of meaning, a type of truth theory of meaning.[31] The verificationist theory of meaning (in at least one of its forms) states that to say that an expression is meaningful is to say that there are some conditions of experience that could exist to show that the expression is true. As noted, Frege and Russell were two proponents of this way of thinking.

A semantic theory of truth was produced by Alfred Tarski for formal semantics. According to Tarski's account, meaning consists of a recursive set of rules that end up yielding an infinite set of sentences, "'p' is true if and only if p", covering the whole language. His innovation produced the notion of propositional functions discussed on the section on universals (which he called "sentential functions"), and a model-theoretic approach to semantics (as opposed to a proof-theoretic one). Finally, some links were forged to the correspondence theory of truth (Tarski, 1944).

Perhaps the most influential current approach in the contemporary theory of meaning is that sketched by Donald Davidson in his introduction to the collection of essays Truth and Meaning in 1967. There he argued for the following two theses:

  • Any learnable language must be statable in a finite form, even if it is capable of a theoretically infinite number of expressions—as we may assume that natural human languages are, at least in principle. If it could not be stated in a finite way then it could not be learned through a finite, empirical method such as the way humans learn their languages. It follows that it must be possible to give a theoretical semantics for any natural language which could give the meanings of an infinite number of sentences on the basis of a finite system of axioms.
  • Giving the meaning of a sentence, he further argued, was equivalent to stating its truth conditions. He proposed that it must be possible to account for language as a set of distinct grammatical features together with a lexicon, and for each of them explain its workings in such a way as to generate trivial (obviously correct) statements of the truth conditions of all the (infinitely many) sentences built up from these.

The result is a theory of meaning that rather resembles, by no accident, Tarski's account.

Davidson's account, though brief, constitutes the first systematic presentation of truth-conditional semantics. He proposed simply translating natural languages into first-order predicate calculus in order to reduce meaning to a function of truth.

Saul Kripke edit

Saul Kripke examined the relation between sense and reference in dealing with possible and actual situations. He showed that one consequence of his interpretation of certain systems of modal logic was that the reference of a proper name is necessarily linked to its referent, but that the sense is not. So for instance "Hesperus" necessarily refers to Hesperus, even in those imaginary cases and worlds in which perhaps Hesperus is not the evening star. That is, Hesperus is necessarily Hesperus, but only contingently the morning star.

This results in the curious situation that part of the meaning of a name — that it refers to some particular thing — is a necessary fact about that name, but another part — that it is used in some particular way or situation — is not.

Kripke also drew the distinction between speaker's meaning and semantic meaning, elaborating on the work of ordinary language philosophers Paul Grice and Keith Donnellan. The speaker's meaning is what the speaker intends to refer to by saying something; the semantic meaning is what the words uttered by the speaker mean according to the language.

In some cases, people do not say what they mean; in other cases, they say something that is in error. In both these cases, the speaker's meaning and the semantic meaning seem to be different. Sometimes words do not actually express what the speaker wants them to express; so words will mean one thing, and what people intend to convey by them might mean another. The meaning of the expression, in such cases, is ambiguous.

Critiques of truth theories of meaning edit

W. V. O. Quine attacked both verificationism and the very notion of meaning in his famous essay, "Two Dogmas of Empiricism". In it, he suggested that meaning was nothing more than a vague and dispensable notion. Instead, he asserted, what was more interesting to study was the synonymy between signs. He also pointed out that verificationism was tied to the distinction between analytic and synthetic statements, and asserted that such a divide was defended ambiguously. He also suggested that the unit of analysis for any potential investigation into the world (and, perhaps, meaning) would be the entire body of statements taken as a collective, not just individual statements on their own.

Other criticisms can be raised on the basis of the limitations that truth-conditional theorists themselves admit to. Tarski, for instance, recognized that truth-conditional theories of meaning only make sense of statements, but fail to explain the meanings of the lexical parts that make up statements. Rather, the meaning of the parts of statements is presupposed by an understanding of the truth-conditions of a whole statement, and explained in terms of what he called "satisfaction conditions".

Still another objection (noted by Frege and others) was that some kinds of statements don't seem to have any truth-conditions at all. For instance, "Hello!" has no truth-conditions, because it doesn't even attempt to tell the listener anything about the state of affairs in the world. In other words, different propositions have different grammatical moods.

Deflationist accounts of truth, sometimes called 'irrealist' accounts, are the staunchest source of criticism of truth-conditional theories of meaning. According to them, "truth" is a word with no serious meaning or function in discourse. For instance, for the deflationist, the sentences "It's true that Tiny Tim is trouble" and "Tiny Tim is trouble" are equivalent. In consequence, for the deflationist, any appeal to truth as an account of meaning has little explanatory power.

The sort of truth theories presented here can also be attacked for their formalism both in practice and principle. The principle of formalism is challenged by the informalists, who suggest that language is largely a construction of the speaker, and so, not compatible with formalization. The practice of formalism is challenged by those who observe that formal languages (such as present-day quantificational logic) fail to capture the expressive power of natural languages (as is arguably demonstrated in the awkward character of the quantificational explanation of definite description statements, as laid out by Bertrand Russell).

Finally, over the past century, forms of logic have been developed that are not dependent exclusively on the notions of truth and falsity. Some of these types of logic have been called modal logics. They explain how certain logical connectives such as "if-then" work in terms of necessity and possibility. Indeed, modal logic was the basis of one of the most popular and rigorous formulations in modern semantics called the Montague grammar. The successes of such systems naturally give rise to the argument that these systems have captured the natural meaning of connectives like if-then far better than an ordinary, truth-functional logic ever could.

Usage and meaning edit

Throughout the 20th century, English philosophy focused closely on analysis of language. This style of analytic philosophy became very influential and led to the development of a wide range of philosophical tools.

Ludwig Wittgenstein edit

The philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein was originally an ideal language philosopher, following the influence of Russell and Frege. In his Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus he had supported the idea of an ideal language built up from atomic statements using logical connectives (see picture theory of meaning and logical atomism). However, as he matured, he came to appreciate more and more the phenomenon of natural language. Philosophical Investigations, published after his death, signalled a sharp departure from his earlier work with its focus upon ordinary language use (see use theory of meaning and ordinary language philosophy). His approach is often summarised by the aphorism "the meaning of a word is its use in a language". However, following in Frege's footsteps, in the Tractatus, Wittgenstein declares: "... Only in the context of a proposition has a name meaning."[32]

His work would come to inspire future generations and spur forward a whole new discipline, which explained meaning in a new way. Meaning in a natural language was seen as primarily a question of how the speaker uses words within the language to express intention.

This close examination of natural language proved to be a powerful philosophical technique. Practitioners who were influenced by Wittgenstein's approach have included an entire tradition of thinkers, featuring P. F. Strawson, Paul Grice, R. M. Hare, R. S. Peters, and Jürgen Habermas.

J. L. Austin edit

At around the same time Ludwig Wittgenstein was re-thinking his approach to language, reflections on the complexity of language led to a more expansive approach to meaning. Following the lead of George Edward Moore, J. L. Austin examined the use of words in great detail. He argued against fixating on the meaning of words. He showed that dictionary definitions are of limited philosophical use, since there is no simple "appendage" to a word that can be called its meaning. Instead, he showed how to focus on the way in which words are used in order to do things. He analysed the structure of utterances into three distinct parts: locutions, illocutions and perlocutions. His pupil John Searle developed the idea under the label "speech acts". Their work greatly influenced pragmatics.

Peter Strawson edit

Past philosophers had understood reference to be tied to words themselves. However, Peter Strawson disagreed in his seminal essay, "On Referring", where he argued that there is nothing true about statements on their own; rather, only the uses of statements could be considered to be true or false.

Indeed, one of the hallmarks of the ordinary use perspective is its insistence upon the distinctions between meaning and use. "Meanings", for ordinary language philosophers, are the instructions for usage of words — the common and conventional definitions of words. Usage, on the other hand, is the actual meanings that individual speakers have — the things that an individual speaker in a particular context wants to refer to. The word "dog" is an example of a meaning, but pointing at a nearby dog and shouting "This dog smells foul!" is an example of usage. From this distinction between usage and meaning arose the divide between the fields of pragmatics and semantics.

Yet another distinction is of some utility in discussing language: "mentioning". Mention is when an expression refers to itself as a linguistic item, usually surrounded by quotation marks. For instance, in the expression "'Opopanax' is hard to spell", what is referred to is the word itself ("opopanax") and not what it means (an obscure gum resin). Frege had referred to instances of mentioning as "opaque contexts".

In his essay, "Reference and Definite Descriptions", Keith Donnellan sought to improve upon Strawson's distinction. He pointed out that there are two uses of definite descriptions: attributive and referential. Attributive uses provide a description of whoever is being referred to, while referential uses point out the actual referent. Attributive uses are like mediated references, while referential uses are more directly referential.

Paul Grice edit

The philosopher Paul Grice, working within the ordinary language tradition, understood "meaning" — in his 1957 article — to have two kinds: natural and non-natural. Natural meaning had to do with cause and effect, for example with the expression "these spots mean measles". Non-natural meaning, on the other hand, had to do with the intentions of the speaker in communicating something to the listener.

In his essay, Logic and Conversation, Grice went on to explain and defend an explanation of how conversations work. His guiding maxim was called the cooperative principle, which claimed that the speaker and the listener will have mutual expectations of the kind of information that will be shared. The principle is broken down into four maxims: Quality (which demands truthfulness and honesty), Quantity (demand for just enough information as is required), Relation (relevance of things brought up), and Manner (lucidity). This principle, if and when followed, lets the speaker and listener figure out the meaning of certain implications by way of inference.

The works of Grice led to an avalanche of research and interest in the field, both supportive and critical. One spinoff was called Relevance theory, developed by Dan Sperber and Deirdre Wilson during the mid-1980s, whose goal was to make the notion of relevance more clear. Similarly, in his work, "Universal pragmatics", Jürgen Habermas began a program that sought to improve upon the work of the ordinary language tradition. In it, he laid out the goal of a valid conversation as a pursuit of mutual understanding.

Noam Chomsky edit

Although he has focused on the structure and functioning of human syntax, in many works[33][34][35][36] Noam Chomsky has discussed many philosophical problems too, including the problem of meaning and reference in human language. Chomsky has formulated a strong criticism against both the externalist notion of reference (reference consists in a direct or causal relation among words and objects) and the internalist one (reference is a mind-mediated relation holding among words and reality). According to Chomsky, both these notions (and many others widely used in philosophy, such as that of truth) are basically inadequate for the naturalistic (= scientific) inquiry on human mind: they are common sense notions, not scientific notions, which cannot, as such, enter in the scientific discussion. Chomsky argues that the notion of reference can be used only when we deal with scientific languages, whose symbols refers to specific things or entities; but when we consider human language expressions, we immediately understand that their reference is vague, in the sense that they can be used to denote many things. For example, the word “book” can be used to denote an abstract object (e.g., “he is reading the book”) or a concrete one (e.g., “the book is on the chair”); the name “London” can denote at the same time a set of buildings, the air of a place and the character of a population (think to the sentence “London is so gray, polluted and sad”). These and other cases induce Chomsky to argue that the only plausible (although not scientific) notion of reference is that of act of reference, a complex phenomenon of language use (performance) which includes many factors (linguistic and not: i.e. beliefs, desires, assumptions about the world, premises, etc.). As Chomsky himself has pointed out, [37] this conception of meaning is very close to that adopted by John Austin, Peter Strawson and the late Wittgenstein.[38]

Inferential role semantics edit

Michael Dummett argued against the kind of truth-conditional semantics presented by Davidson. Instead, he argued that basing semantics on assertion conditions avoids a number of difficulties with truth-conditional semantics, such as the transcendental nature of certain kinds of truth condition. He leverages work done in proof-theoretic semantics to provide a kind of inferential role semantics, where:

  • The meaning of sentences and grammatical constructs is given by their assertion conditions; and
  • Such a semantics is only guaranteed to be coherent if the inferences associated with the parts of language are in logical harmony.

A semantics based upon assertion conditions is called a verificationist semantics: cf. the verificationism of the Vienna Circle.

This work is closely related, though not identical, to one-factor theories of conceptual role semantics.

Critiques of use theories of meaning edit

Sometimes between the 1950-1990s, cognitive scientist Jerry Fodor said that use theories of meaning (of the Wittgensteinian kind) seem to assume that language is solely a public phenomenon, that there is no such thing as a "private language". Fodor thinks it is necessary to create or describe the language of thought, which would seemingly require the existence of a "private language".

In the 1960s, David Kellogg Lewis described meaning as use, a feature of a social convention and conventions as regularities of a specific sort. Lewis' work was an application of game theory in philosophical topics.[39] Conventions, he argued, are a species of coordination equilibria.

Idea theory of meaning edit

 
Memberships of a graded class

The idea theory of meaning (also ideational theory of meaning), most commonly associated with the British empiricist John Locke, claims that meanings are mental representations provoked by signs.[40]

The term "ideas" is used to refer to either mental representations, or to mental activity in general. Those who seek an explanation for meaning in the former sort of account endorse a stronger sort of idea theory of mind than the latter.

Each idea is understood to be necessarily about something external and/or internal, real or imaginary. For example, in contrast to the abstract meaning of the universal "dog", the referent "this dog" may mean a particular real life chihuahua. In both cases, the word is about something, but in the former it is about the class of dogs as generally understood, while in the latter it is about a very real and particular dog in the real world.

John Locke considered all ideas to be both imaginable objects of sensation and the very unimaginable objects of reflection. He said in his Essay Concerning Human Understanding that words are used both as signs for ideas and also to signify a lack of certain ideas. David Hume held that thoughts were kinds of imaginable entities: his Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding, section 2. He argued that any words that could not call upon any past experience were without meaning.

In contrast to Locke and Hume, George Berkeley and Ludwig Wittgenstein held that ideas alone are unable to account for the different variations within a general meaning. For example, any hypothetical image of the meaning of "dog" has to include such varied images as a chihuahua, a pug, and a black Labrador; and this seems impossible to imagine, since all of those particular breeds look very different from one another. Another way to see this point is to question why it is that, if we have an image of a specific type of dog (say of a chihuahua), it should be entitled to represent the entire concept.

Another criticism is that some meaningful words, known as non-lexical items, don't have any meaningfully associated image. For example, the word "the" has a meaning, but one would be hard-pressed to find a mental representation that fits it. Still another objection lies in the observation that certain linguistic items name something in the real world, and are meaningful, yet which we have no mental representations to deal with. For instance, it is not known what Newton's father looked like, yet the phrase "Newton's father" still has meaning.

Another problem is that of composition—that it is difficult to explain how words and phrases combine into sentences if only ideas are involved in meaning.

Eleanor Rosch and George Lakoff have advanced a theory of "prototypes" which suggests that many lexical categories, at least on the face of things, have "radial structures". That is to say, there are some ideal member(s) in the category that seem to represent the category better than other members. For example, the category of "birds" may feature the robin as the prototype, or the ideal kind of bird. With experience, subjects might come to evaluate membership in the category of "bird" by comparing candidate members to the prototype and evaluating for similarities. So, for example, a penguin or an ostrich would sit at the fringe of the meaning of "bird", because a penguin is unlike a robin.

Intimately related to these researches is the notion of a psychologically basic level, which is both the first level named and understood by children, and "the highest level at which a single mental image can reflect the entire category" (Lakoff 1987:46). The "basic level" of cognition is understood by Lakoff as crucially drawing upon "image-schemas" along with various other cognitive processes.

Philosophers Ned Block, Gilbert Harman and Hartry Field, and cognitive scientists G. Miller and P. Johnson-Laird say that the meaning of a term can be found by investigating its role in relation to other concepts and mental states. They endorse a "conceptual role semantics". Those proponents of this view who understand meanings to be exhausted by the content of mental states can be said to endorse "one-factor" accounts of conceptual role semantics and thus to fit within the tradition of idea theories.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Richard E Morehouse, Beginning Interpretive Inquiry, Routledge, 2012, p. 32.
  2. ^ a b c Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Supp., "Truth", auth: Michael Williams, p572-573 (Macmillan, 1996)
  3. ^ Blackburn, Simon, and Simmons, Keith (eds., 1999), Truth, Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK. Includes papers by James, Ramsey, Russell, Tarski, and more recent work.
  4. ^ Hale, Bob; Wright, Crispin, eds. (1997). "A Companion to the Philosophy of Language". (2007 ed.). Oxford: Blackwell. pp. 309-30. doi:10.1111/b.9780631213260.1999.00015.x. ISBN 9780631213260. {{cite book}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  5. ^ Horwich, Paul, Truth, (2nd edition, 1988),
  6. ^ Field, Hartry, Truth and the Absence of Fact (2001).
  7. ^ Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Vol.2, "Correspondence Theory of Truth", auth: Arthur N. Prior, p223 (Macmillan, 1969) Prior uses Bertrand Russell's wording in defining correspondence theory. According to Prior, Russell was substantially responsible for helping to make correspondence theory widely known under this name.
  8. ^ Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Vol.2, "Correspondence Theory of Truth" by Arthur N. Prior, pp. 223-224 (Macmillan, 1969)
  9. ^ Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Vol.2, "Correspondence Theory of Truth" by Arthur N. Prior, p 224, Macmillan, 1969.
  10. ^ "Correspondence Theory of Truth", in Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  11. ^ Summa, I, Q.16, A.2
  12. ^ "Correspondence Theory of Truth", in Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, (citing De Veritate Q.1, A.1 and 3; cf. Summa Theologiae Q.16).
  13. ^ See, e.g., Bradley, F.H., "On Truth and Copying", in Blackburn, et al. (eds., 1999),Truth, 31-45.
  14. ^ Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Vol.2, "Correspondence Theory of Truth", auth: Arthur N. Prior, pp. 223 ff. Macmillan, 1969. See especially, sections on "Moore's Correspondence Theory", 225-226, "Russell's Correspondence Theory", 226-227, "Ramsey and Later Wittgenstein", 228-229, "Tarski's Semantic Theory", 230-231.
  15. ^ Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Vol.2, "Correspondence Theory of Truth" by Arthur N. Prior, p. 223 ff. Macmillan, 1969). See section on "Tarski's Semantic Theory", 230-231.
  16. ^ Immanuel Kant, for instance, assembled a controversial but quite coherent system in the early 19th century, whose validity of meaning and usefulness continues to be debated even today. Similarly, the systems of Leibniz and Spinoza are characteristic systems that are internally coherent but controversial in terms of their utility and validity.
  17. ^ Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Vol.2, "Coherence Theory of Truth", auth: Alan R. White, p130-131 (Macmillan, 1969)
  18. ^ Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Vol.2, "Coherence Theory of Truth", auth: Alan R. White, pp. 131–133, see esp., section on "Epistemological assumptions" (Macmillan, 1969)
  19. ^ Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Vol.2, "Coherence Theory of Truth", auth: Alan R. White, p130
  20. ^ May, Todd, 1993, Between Genealogy and Epistemology: Psychology, politics in the thought of Michel Foucault' with reference to Althusser and Balibar, 1970
  21. ^ See e.g. Habermas, Jürgen, Knowledge and Human Interests (English translation, 1972).
  22. ^ See e.g. Habermas, Jürgen, Knowledge and Human Interests (English translation, 1972), esp. Part III, pp 187ff.
  23. ^ Rescher, Nicholas, Pluralism: Against the Demand for Consensus (1995).
  24. ^ Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Vol.5, "Pragmatic Theory of Truth", 427 (Macmillan, 1969).
  25. ^ Peirce, C.S. (1901), "Truth and Falsity and Error" (in part), pp. 716–720 in James Mark Baldwin, ed., Dictionary of Philosophy and Psychology, v. 2. Peirce's section is entitled "Logical", beginning on p. 718, column 1, and ending on p. 720 with the initials "(C.S.P.)", see Google Books Eprint. Reprinted, Collected Papers v. 5, pp. 565–573.
  26. ^ James, William, The Meaning of Truth, A Sequel to 'Pragmatism', (1909).
  27. ^ Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Vol.2, "Dewey, John", auth Richard J. Bernstein, p383 (Macmillan, 1969)
  28. ^ Sahakian, W.S. & Sahakian, M.L., Ideas of the Great Philosophers, New York: Barnes & Noble, 1966
  29. ^ Feynman, Richard (1967). The Character of Physical Law. MIT Press. p. 150. ISBN 9780262560030.
  30. ^ G. E. Moore, A Defence of Common Sense (1925)
  31. ^ S. N. Ganguly, Logical Positivism as a Theory of Meaning, Allied Publishers, 1967, p. 180.
  32. ^ Wittgenstein, Ludwig (1999). Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus. Dover Publications Inc. p. 39. ISBN 0-486-40445-5.
  33. ^ Chomsky, Noam (1975). Reflections on Language. Pantheom Book.
  34. ^ Chomsky, Noam (1980). Rules and Representations. Columbia University Press.
  35. ^ Chomsky, Noam (2000). New Horizons in the Study of Language and Mind. The MIT Press.
  36. ^ Chomsky, Noam (2012). The Science of Language. Interviews with James McGilvray. Cambridge University Press.
  37. ^ Chomsky, Noam (1975). The Logical Structure of Linguistic Theory. University of Chicago Press.
  38. ^ Cipriani, Enrico (2016). "Some reflections on Chomsky's notion of reference". Linguistics Beyond and within. 2: 44–60. doi:10.31743/lingbaw.5637.
  39. ^ Rescorla, Michael, "Convention", The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Spring 2011 Edition)
  40. ^ Grigoris Antoniou, John Slaney (eds.), Advanced Topics in Artificial Intelligence, Springer, 1998, p. 9.

Further reading edit

  • Akmajian, Adrian et al (1995), Linguistics: an introduction to language and communication (fourth edition), Cambridge: MIT Press.
  • Allan, Keith (1986), Linguistic Meaning, Volume One, New York: Routledge & Kegan Paul.
  • Arena, Leonardo Vittorio (2012), Nonsense as the Meaning (ebook).
  • Austin, J. L. (1962), How to Do Things With Words, Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
  • Berger, Peter and Thomas Luckmann (1967), The Social Construction of Reality : A Treatise in the Sociology of Knowledge (first edition: 240 pages), Anchor Books.
  • Davidson, Donald (2001), Inquiries into Truth and Interpretation (second edition), Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Dummett, Michael (1981), Frege: Philosophy of Language (second edition), Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
  • Frege, Gottlob (ed. Michael Beaney, 1997), The Frege Reader, Oxford: Blackwell.
  • Gauker, Christopher (2003), Words without Meaning, MIT Press.
  • Goffman, Erving (1959), Presentation of Self in Everyday Life, Anchor Books.
  • Grice, Paul (1989), Studies in the Way of Words, Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
  • Searle, John and Daniel Vanderveken (1985), Foundations of Illocutionary Logic, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Searle, John (1969), Speech Acts, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Searle, John (1979), Expression and Meaning, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Stonier, Tom (1997), Information and Meaning: An Evolutionary Perspective, London: Springer.

External links edit

meaning, philosophy, this, article, about, philosophical, treatment, meaning, linguistic, treatment, meaning, semantics, linguistics, linguistic, treatment, meaning, meaning, linguistic, other, uses, meaning, philosophy, more, specifically, fields, semantics, . This article is about the philosophical treatment of meaning For the linguistic treatment of meaning see Semantics Linguistics For the non linguistic treatment of meaning see Meaning non linguistic For other uses see Meaning In philosophy more specifically in its sub fields semantics semiotics philosophy of language metaphysics and metasemantics meaning is a relationship between two sorts of things signs and the kinds of things they intend express or signify 1 The types of meanings vary according to the types of the thing that is being represented There are the things which might have meaning things that are also signs of other things and therefore are always meaningful i e natural signs of the physical world and ideas within the mind things that are necessarily meaningful such as words and nonverbal symbols The major contemporary positions of meaning come under the following partial definitions of meaning psychological theories involving notions of thought intention or understanding logical theories involving notions such as intension cognitive content or sense along with extension reference or denotation message content information or communication truth conditions usage and the instructions for usage measurement computation or operation Contents 1 Truth and meaning 1 1 Substantive theories of meaning 1 1 1 Correspondence theory 1 1 2 Coherence theory 1 1 3 Constructivist theory 1 1 4 Consensus theory 1 1 5 Pragmatic theory 1 2 Associated theories and commentaries 1 2 1 Logic and language 1 2 2 Gottlob Frege 1 2 3 Bertrand Russell 1 2 4 Other truth theories of meaning 1 2 5 Saul Kripke 1 2 6 Critiques of truth theories of meaning 2 Usage and meaning 2 1 Ludwig Wittgenstein 2 2 J L Austin 2 3 Peter Strawson 2 4 Paul Grice 2 5 Noam Chomsky 2 6 Inferential role semantics 2 7 Critiques of use theories of meaning 3 Idea theory of meaning 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksTruth and meaning editMain article Truth The question of what is a proper basis for deciding how words symbols ideas and beliefs may properly be considered to truthfully denote meaning whether by a single person or by an entire society has been considered by five major types of theory of meaning and truth 2 3 4 Each type is discussed below together with its principal exponents 2 5 6 Substantive theories of meaning edit Correspondence theory edit Correspondence theories emphasise that true beliefs and true statements of meaning correspond to the actual state of affairs and that associated meanings must be in agreement with these beliefs and statements 7 This type of theory stresses a relationship between thoughts or statements on one hand and things or objects on the other It is a traditional model tracing its origins to ancient Greek philosophers such as Socrates Plato and Aristotle 8 This class of theories holds that the truth or the falsity of a representation is determined in principle entirely by how it relates to things by whether it accurately describes those things An example of correspondence theory is the statement by the thirteenth century philosopher theologian Thomas Aquinas Veritas est adaequatio rei et intellectus Truth is the equation or adequation of things and intellect a statement which Aquinas attributed to the ninth century neoplatonist Isaac Israeli 9 10 11 Aquinas also restated the theory as A judgment is said to be true when it conforms to the external reality 12 Correspondence theory centres heavily around the assumption that truth and meaning are a matter of accurately copying what is known as objective reality and then representing it in thoughts words and other symbols 13 Many modern theorists have stated that this ideal cannot be achieved without analysing additional factors 2 14 For example language plays a role in that all languages have words to represent concepts that are virtually undefined in other languages The German word Zeitgeist is one such example one who speaks or understands the language may know what it means but any translation of the word apparently fails to accurately capture its full meaning this is a problem with many abstract words especially those derived in agglutinative languages Thus some words add an additional parameter to the construction of an accurate truth predicate Among the philosophers who grappled with this problem is Alfred Tarski whose semantic theory is summarized further below in this article 15 Coherence theory edit For coherence theories in general the assessment of meaning and truth requires a proper fit of elements within a whole system Very often though coherence is taken to imply something more than simple logical consistency often there is a demand that the propositions in a coherent system lend mutual inferential support to each other So for example the completeness and comprehensiveness of the underlying set of concepts is a critical factor in judging the validity and usefulness of a coherent system 16 A pervasive tenet of coherence theories is the idea that truth is primarily a property of whole systems of propositions and can be ascribed to individual propositions only according to their coherence with the whole Among the assortment of perspectives commonly regarded as coherence theory theorists differ on the question of whether coherence entails many possible true systems of thought or only a single absolute system Some variants of coherence theory are claimed to describe the essential and intrinsic properties of formal systems in logic and mathematics 17 However formal reasoners are content to contemplate axiomatically independent and sometimes mutually contradictory systems side by side for example the various alternative geometries On the whole coherence theories have been rejected for lacking justification in their application to other areas of truth especially with respect to assertions about the natural world empirical data in general assertions about practical matters of psychology and society particularly when used without support from the other major theories of truth 18 Coherence theories distinguish the thought of rationalist philosophers particularly of Spinoza Leibniz and G W F Hegel along with the British philosopher F H Bradley 19 Other alternatives may be found among several proponents of logical positivism notably Otto Neurath and Carl Hempel Constructivist theory edit Main article Constructivist epistemology Social constructivism holds that meaning and truth are constructed by social processes are historically and culturally specific and are in part shaped through power struggles within a community Constructivism views all of our knowledge as constructed because it does not reflect any external transcendent realities as a pure correspondence theory might hold Rather perceptions of truth are viewed as contingent on convention human perception and social experience It is believed by constructivists that representations of physical and biological reality including race sexuality and gender are socially constructed Giambattista Vico was among the first to claim that history and culture along with their meaning are human products Vico s epistemological orientation gathers the most diverse rays and unfolds in one axiom verum ipsum factum truth itself is constructed Hegel and Marx were among the other early proponents of the premise that truth is or can be socially constructed Marx like many critical theorists who followed did not reject the existence of objective truth but rather distinguished between true knowledge and knowledge that has been distorted through power or ideology For Marx scientific and true knowledge is in accordance with the dialectical understanding of history and ideological knowledge is an epiphenomenal expression of the relation of material forces in a given economic arrangement 20 Consensus theory edit Main article Consensus theory of truth Consensus theory holds that meaning and truth are whatever is agreed upon or in some versions might come to be agreed upon by some specified group Such a group might include all human beings or a subset thereof consisting of more than one person Among the current advocates of consensus theory as a useful accounting of the concept of truth is the philosopher Jurgen Habermas 21 Habermas maintains that truth is what would be agreed upon in an ideal speech situation 22 Among the current strong critics of consensus theory is the philosopher Nicholas Rescher 23 Pragmatic theory edit Main article Pragmatic theory of truth The three most influential forms of the pragmatic theory of truth and meaning were introduced around the turn of the 20th century by Charles Sanders Peirce William James and John Dewey Although there are wide differences in viewpoint among these and other proponents of pragmatic theory they hold in common that meaning and truth are verified and confirmed by the results of putting one s concepts into practice 24 Peirce defines truth as follows Truth is that concordance of an abstract statement with the ideal limit towards which endless investigation would tend to bring scientific belief which concordance the abstract statement may possess by virtue of the confession of its inaccuracy and one sidedness and this confession is an essential ingredient of truth 25 This statement stresses Peirce s view that ideas of approximation incompleteness and partiality what he describes elsewhere as fallibilism and reference to the future are essential to a proper conception of meaning and truth Although Peirce uses words like concordance and correspondence to describe one aspect of the pragmatic sign relation he is also quite explicit in saying that definitions of truth based on mere correspondence are no more than nominal definitions which he accords a lower status than real definitions William James s version of pragmatic theory while complex is often summarized by his statement that the true is only the expedient in our way of thinking just as the right is only the expedient in our way of behaving 26 By this James meant that truth is a quality the value of which is confirmed by its effectiveness when applying concepts to practice thus pragmatic John Dewey less broadly than James but more broadly than Peirce held that inquiry whether scientific technical sociological philosophical or cultural is self corrective over time if openly submitted for testing by a community of inquirers in order to clarify justify refine and or refute proposed meanings and truths 27 A later variation of the pragmatic theory was William Ernest Hocking s negative pragmatism what works may or may not be true but what fails cannot be true because the truth and its meaning always works 28 James s and Dewey s ideas also ascribe meaning and truth to repeated testing which is self corrective over time Pragmatism and negative pragmatism are also closely aligned with the coherence theory of truth in that any testing should not be isolated but rather incorporate knowledge from all human endeavors and experience The universe is a whole and integrated system and testing should acknowledge and account for its diversity As physicist Richard Feynman said if it disagrees with experiment it is wrong 29 Associated theories and commentaries edit Some have asserted that meaning is nothing substantially more or less than the truth conditions they involve For such theories an emphasis is placed upon reference to actual things in the world to account for meaning with the caveat that reference more or less explains the greater part or all of meaning itself Logic and language edit The logical positivists argued that the meaning of a statement arose from how it is verified Gottlob Frege edit In his paper Uber Sinn und Bedeutung now usually translated as On Sense and Reference Gottlob Frege argued that proper names present at least two problems in explaining meaning Suppose the meaning of a name is the thing it refers to Sam then means a person in the world who is named Sam But if the object referred to by the name did not exist i e Pegasus then according to that theory it would be meaningless Suppose two different names refer to the same object Hesperus and Phosphorus were the names given to what were considered distinct celestial bodies It was later shown that they were the same thing the planet Venus If the words meant the same thing then substituting one for the other in a sentence would not result in a sentence that differs in meaning from the original But in that case Hesperus is Phosphorus would mean the same thing as Hesperus is Hesperus This is clearly absurd since we learn something new and unobvious by the former statement but not by the latter Frege can be interpreted as arguing that it was therefore a mistake to think that the meaning of a name is the thing it refers to Instead the meaning must be something else the sense of the word Two names for the same person then can have different senses or meanings one referent might be picked out by more than one sense This sort of theory is called a mediated reference theory Frege argued that ultimately the same bifurcation of meaning must apply to most or all linguistic categories such as to quantificational expressions like All boats float Bertrand Russell edit Logical analysis was further advanced by Bertrand Russell and Alfred North Whitehead in their groundbreaking Principia Mathematica which attempted to produce a formal language with which the truth of all mathematical statements could be demonstrated from first principles Russell differed from Frege greatly on many points however He rejected Frege s sense reference distinction He also disagreed that language was of fundamental significance to philosophy and saw the project of developing formal logic as a way of eliminating all of the confusions caused by ordinary language and hence at creating a perfectly transparent medium in which to conduct traditional philosophical argument He hoped ultimately to extend the proofs of the Principia to all possible true statements a scheme he called logical atomism For a while it appeared that his pupil Wittgenstein had succeeded in this plan with his Tractatus Logico Philosophicus Russell s work and that of his colleague G E Moore developed in response to what they perceived as the nonsense dominating British philosophy departments at the turn of the 20th century which was a kind of British Idealism most of which was derived albeit very distantly from the work of Hegel In response Moore developed an approach Common Sense Philosophy 30 which sought to examine philosophical difficulties by a close analysis of the language used in order to determine its meaning In this way Moore sought to expunge philosophical absurdities such as time is unreal Moore s work would have significant if oblique influence largely mediated by Wittgenstein on Ordinary language philosophy Other truth theories of meaning edit The Vienna Circle a famous group of logical positivists from the early 20th century closely allied with Russell and Frege adopted the verificationist theory of meaning a type of truth theory of meaning 31 The verificationist theory of meaning in at least one of its forms states that to say that an expression is meaningful is to say that there are some conditions of experience that could exist to show that the expression is true As noted Frege and Russell were two proponents of this way of thinking A semantic theory of truth was produced by Alfred Tarski for formal semantics According to Tarski s account meaning consists of a recursive set of rules that end up yielding an infinite set of sentences p is true if and only if p covering the whole language His innovation produced the notion of propositional functions discussed on the section on universals which he called sentential functions and a model theoretic approach to semantics as opposed to a proof theoretic one Finally some links were forged to the correspondence theory of truth Tarski 1944 Perhaps the most influential current approach in the contemporary theory of meaning is that sketched by Donald Davidson in his introduction to the collection of essays Truth and Meaning in 1967 There he argued for the following two theses Any learnable language must be statable in a finite form even if it is capable of a theoretically infinite number of expressions as we may assume that natural human languages are at least in principle If it could not be stated in a finite way then it could not be learned through a finite empirical method such as the way humans learn their languages It follows that it must be possible to give a theoretical semantics for any natural language which could give the meanings of an infinite number of sentences on the basis of a finite system of axioms Giving the meaning of a sentence he further argued was equivalent to stating its truth conditions He proposed that it must be possible to account for language as a set of distinct grammatical features together with a lexicon and for each of them explain its workings in such a way as to generate trivial obviously correct statements of the truth conditions of all the infinitely many sentences built up from these The result is a theory of meaning that rather resembles by no accident Tarski s account Davidson s account though brief constitutes the first systematic presentation of truth conditional semantics He proposed simply translating natural languages into first order predicate calculus in order to reduce meaning to a function of truth Saul Kripke edit Saul Kripke examined the relation between sense and reference in dealing with possible and actual situations He showed that one consequence of his interpretation of certain systems of modal logic was that the reference of a proper name is necessarily linked to its referent but that the sense is not So for instance Hesperus necessarily refers to Hesperus even in those imaginary cases and worlds in which perhaps Hesperus is not the evening star That is Hesperus is necessarily Hesperus but only contingently the morning star This results in the curious situation that part of the meaning of a name that it refers to some particular thing is a necessary fact about that name but another part that it is used in some particular way or situation is not Kripke also drew the distinction between speaker s meaning and semantic meaning elaborating on the work of ordinary language philosophers Paul Grice and Keith Donnellan The speaker s meaning is what the speaker intends to refer to by saying something the semantic meaning is what the words uttered by the speaker mean according to the language In some cases people do not say what they mean in other cases they say something that is in error In both these cases the speaker s meaning and the semantic meaning seem to be different Sometimes words do not actually express what the speaker wants them to express so words will mean one thing and what people intend to convey by them might mean another The meaning of the expression in such cases is ambiguous Critiques of truth theories of meaning edit W V O Quine attacked both verificationism and the very notion of meaning in his famous essay Two Dogmas of Empiricism In it he suggested that meaning was nothing more than a vague and dispensable notion Instead he asserted what was more interesting to study was the synonymy between signs He also pointed out that verificationism was tied to the distinction between analytic and synthetic statements and asserted that such a divide was defended ambiguously He also suggested that the unit of analysis for any potential investigation into the world and perhaps meaning would be the entire body of statements taken as a collective not just individual statements on their own Other criticisms can be raised on the basis of the limitations that truth conditional theorists themselves admit to Tarski for instance recognized that truth conditional theories of meaning only make sense of statements but fail to explain the meanings of the lexical parts that make up statements Rather the meaning of the parts of statements is presupposed by an understanding of the truth conditions of a whole statement and explained in terms of what he called satisfaction conditions Still another objection noted by Frege and others was that some kinds of statements don t seem to have any truth conditions at all For instance Hello has no truth conditions because it doesn t even attempt to tell the listener anything about the state of affairs in the world In other words different propositions have different grammatical moods Deflationist accounts of truth sometimes called irrealist accounts are the staunchest source of criticism of truth conditional theories of meaning According to them truth is a word with no serious meaning or function in discourse For instance for the deflationist the sentences It s true that Tiny Tim is trouble and Tiny Tim is trouble are equivalent In consequence for the deflationist any appeal to truth as an account of meaning has little explanatory power The sort of truth theories presented here can also be attacked for their formalism both in practice and principle The principle of formalism is challenged by the informalists who suggest that language is largely a construction of the speaker and so not compatible with formalization The practice of formalism is challenged by those who observe that formal languages such as present day quantificational logic fail to capture the expressive power of natural languages as is arguably demonstrated in the awkward character of the quantificational explanation of definite description statements as laid out by Bertrand Russell Finally over the past century forms of logic have been developed that are not dependent exclusively on the notions of truth and falsity Some of these types of logic have been called modal logics They explain how certain logical connectives such as if then work in terms of necessity and possibility Indeed modal logic was the basis of one of the most popular and rigorous formulations in modern semantics called the Montague grammar The successes of such systems naturally give rise to the argument that these systems have captured the natural meaning of connectives like if then far better than an ordinary truth functional logic ever could Usage and meaning editThroughout the 20th century English philosophy focused closely on analysis of language This style of analytic philosophy became very influential and led to the development of a wide range of philosophical tools Ludwig Wittgenstein edit The philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein was originally an ideal language philosopher following the influence of Russell and Frege In his Tractatus Logico Philosophicus he had supported the idea of an ideal language built up from atomic statements using logical connectives see picture theory of meaning and logical atomism However as he matured he came to appreciate more and more the phenomenon of natural language Philosophical Investigations published after his death signalled a sharp departure from his earlier work with its focus upon ordinary language use see use theory of meaning and ordinary language philosophy His approach is often summarised by the aphorism the meaning of a word is its use in a language However following in Frege s footsteps in the Tractatus Wittgenstein declares Only in the context of a proposition has a name meaning 32 His work would come to inspire future generations and spur forward a whole new discipline which explained meaning in a new way Meaning in a natural language was seen as primarily a question of how the speaker uses words within the language to express intention This close examination of natural language proved to be a powerful philosophical technique Practitioners who were influenced by Wittgenstein s approach have included an entire tradition of thinkers featuring P F Strawson Paul Grice R M Hare R S Peters and Jurgen Habermas J L Austin edit At around the same time Ludwig Wittgenstein was re thinking his approach to language reflections on the complexity of language led to a more expansive approach to meaning Following the lead of George Edward Moore J L Austin examined the use of words in great detail He argued against fixating on the meaning of words He showed that dictionary definitions are of limited philosophical use since there is no simple appendage to a word that can be called its meaning Instead he showed how to focus on the way in which words are used in order to do things He analysed the structure of utterances into three distinct parts locutions illocutions and perlocutions His pupil John Searle developed the idea under the label speech acts Their work greatly influenced pragmatics Peter Strawson edit Past philosophers had understood reference to be tied to words themselves However Peter Strawson disagreed in his seminal essay On Referring where he argued that there is nothing true about statements on their own rather only the uses of statements could be considered to be true or false Indeed one of the hallmarks of the ordinary use perspective is its insistence upon the distinctions between meaning and use Meanings for ordinary language philosophers are the instructions for usage of words the common and conventional definitions of words Usage on the other hand is the actual meanings that individual speakers have the things that an individual speaker in a particular context wants to refer to The word dog is an example of a meaning but pointing at a nearby dog and shouting This dog smells foul is an example of usage From this distinction between usage and meaning arose the divide between the fields of pragmatics and semantics Yet another distinction is of some utility in discussing language mentioning Mention is when an expression refers to itself as a linguistic item usually surrounded by quotation marks For instance in the expression Opopanax is hard to spell what is referred to is the word itself opopanax and not what it means an obscure gum resin Frege had referred to instances of mentioning as opaque contexts In his essay Reference and Definite Descriptions Keith Donnellan sought to improve upon Strawson s distinction He pointed out that there are two uses of definite descriptions attributive and referential Attributive uses provide a description of whoever is being referred to while referential uses point out the actual referent Attributive uses are like mediated references while referential uses are more directly referential Paul Grice edit The philosopher Paul Grice working within the ordinary language tradition understood meaning in his 1957 article to have two kinds natural and non natural Natural meaning had to do with cause and effect for example with the expression these spots mean measles Non natural meaning on the other hand had to do with the intentions of the speaker in communicating something to the listener In his essay Logic and Conversation Grice went on to explain and defend an explanation of how conversations work His guiding maxim was called the cooperative principle which claimed that the speaker and the listener will have mutual expectations of the kind of information that will be shared The principle is broken down into four maxims Quality which demands truthfulness and honesty Quantity demand for just enough information as is required Relation relevance of things brought up and Manner lucidity This principle if and when followed lets the speaker and listener figure out the meaning of certain implications by way of inference The works of Grice led to an avalanche of research and interest in the field both supportive and critical One spinoff was called Relevance theory developed by Dan Sperber and Deirdre Wilson during the mid 1980s whose goal was to make the notion of relevance more clear Similarly in his work Universal pragmatics Jurgen Habermas began a program that sought to improve upon the work of the ordinary language tradition In it he laid out the goal of a valid conversation as a pursuit of mutual understanding Noam Chomsky edit Although he has focused on the structure and functioning of human syntax in many works 33 34 35 36 Noam Chomsky has discussed many philosophical problems too including the problem of meaning and reference in human language Chomsky has formulated a strong criticism against both the externalist notion of reference reference consists in a direct or causal relation among words and objects and the internalist one reference is a mind mediated relation holding among words and reality According to Chomsky both these notions and many others widely used in philosophy such as that of truth are basically inadequate for the naturalistic scientific inquiry on human mind they are common sense notions not scientific notions which cannot as such enter in the scientific discussion Chomsky argues that the notion of reference can be used only when we deal with scientific languages whose symbols refers to specific things or entities but when we consider human language expressions we immediately understand that their reference is vague in the sense that they can be used to denote many things For example the word book can be used to denote an abstract object e g he is reading the book or a concrete one e g the book is on the chair the name London can denote at the same time a set of buildings the air of a place and the character of a population think to the sentence London is so gray polluted and sad These and other cases induce Chomsky to argue that the only plausible although not scientific notion of reference is that of act of reference a complex phenomenon of language use performance which includes many factors linguistic and not i e beliefs desires assumptions about the world premises etc As Chomsky himself has pointed out 37 this conception of meaning is very close to that adopted by John Austin Peter Strawson and the late Wittgenstein 38 Inferential role semantics edit Main article Inferential role semantics Michael Dummett argued against the kind of truth conditional semantics presented by Davidson Instead he argued that basing semantics on assertion conditions avoids a number of difficulties with truth conditional semantics such as the transcendental nature of certain kinds of truth condition He leverages work done in proof theoretic semantics to provide a kind of inferential role semantics where The meaning of sentences and grammatical constructs is given by their assertion conditions and Such a semantics is only guaranteed to be coherent if the inferences associated with the parts of language are in logical harmony A semantics based upon assertion conditions is called a verificationist semantics cf the verificationism of the Vienna Circle This work is closely related though not identical to one factor theories of conceptual role semantics Critiques of use theories of meaning edit Sometimes between the 1950 1990s cognitive scientist Jerry Fodor said that use theories of meaning of the Wittgensteinian kind seem to assume that language is solely a public phenomenon that there is no such thing as a private language Fodor thinks it is necessary to create or describe the language of thought which would seemingly require the existence of a private language In the 1960s David Kellogg Lewis described meaning as use a feature of a social convention and conventions as regularities of a specific sort Lewis work was an application of game theory in philosophical topics 39 Conventions he argued are a species of coordination equilibria Idea theory of meaning edit nbsp Memberships of a graded classThe idea theory of meaning also ideational theory of meaning most commonly associated with the British empiricist John Locke claims that meanings are mental representations provoked by signs 40 The term ideas is used to refer to either mental representations or to mental activity in general Those who seek an explanation for meaning in the former sort of account endorse a stronger sort of idea theory of mind than the latter Each idea is understood to be necessarily about something external and or internal real or imaginary For example in contrast to the abstract meaning of the universal dog the referent this dog may mean a particular real life chihuahua In both cases the word is about something but in the former it is about the class of dogs as generally understood while in the latter it is about a very real and particular dog in the real world John Locke considered all ideas to be both imaginable objects of sensation and the very unimaginable objects of reflection He said in his Essay Concerning Human Understanding that words are used both as signs for ideas and also to signify a lack of certain ideas David Hume held that thoughts were kinds of imaginable entities his Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding section 2 He argued that any words that could not call upon any past experience were without meaning In contrast to Locke and Hume George Berkeley and Ludwig Wittgenstein held that ideas alone are unable to account for the different variations within a general meaning For example any hypothetical image of the meaning of dog has to include such varied images as a chihuahua a pug and a black Labrador and this seems impossible to imagine since all of those particular breeds look very different from one another Another way to see this point is to question why it is that if we have an image of a specific type of dog say of a chihuahua it should be entitled to represent the entire concept Another criticism is that some meaningful words known as non lexical items don t have any meaningfully associated image For example the word the has a meaning but one would be hard pressed to find a mental representation that fits it Still another objection lies in the observation that certain linguistic items name something in the real world and are meaningful yet which we have no mental representations to deal with For instance it is not known what Newton s father looked like yet the phrase Newton s father still has meaning Another problem is that of composition that it is difficult to explain how words and phrases combine into sentences if only ideas are involved in meaning Eleanor Rosch and George Lakoff have advanced a theory of prototypes which suggests that many lexical categories at least on the face of things have radial structures That is to say there are some ideal member s in the category that seem to represent the category better than other members For example the category of birds may feature the robin as the prototype or the ideal kind of bird With experience subjects might come to evaluate membership in the category of bird by comparing candidate members to the prototype and evaluating for similarities So for example a penguin or an ostrich would sit at the fringe of the meaning of bird because a penguin is unlike a robin Intimately related to these researches is the notion of a psychologically basic level which is both the first level named and understood by children and the highest level at which a single mental image can reflect the entire category Lakoff 1987 46 The basic level of cognition is understood by Lakoff as crucially drawing upon image schemas along with various other cognitive processes Philosophers Ned Block Gilbert Harman and Hartry Field and cognitive scientists G Miller and P Johnson Laird say that the meaning of a term can be found by investigating its role in relation to other concepts and mental states They endorse a conceptual role semantics Those proponents of this view who understand meanings to be exhausted by the content of mental states can be said to endorse one factor accounts of conceptual role semantics and thus to fit within the tradition of idea theories See also editDefinitions of philosophy Meaning existential Semiotics SemeioticReferences edit Richard E Morehouse Beginning Interpretive Inquiry Routledge 2012 p 32 a b c Encyclopedia of Philosophy Supp Truth auth Michael Williams p572 573 Macmillan 1996 Blackburn Simon and Simmons Keith eds 1999 Truth Oxford University Press Oxford UK Includes papers by James Ramsey Russell Tarski and more recent work Hale Bob Wright Crispin eds 1997 A Companion to the Philosophy of Language 2007 ed Oxford Blackwell pp 309 30 doi 10 1111 b 9780631213260 1999 00015 x ISBN 9780631213260 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a Missing or empty title help Horwich Paul Truth 2nd edition 1988 Field Hartry Truth and the Absence of Fact 2001 Encyclopedia of Philosophy Vol 2 Correspondence Theory of Truth auth Arthur N Prior p223 Macmillan 1969 Prior uses Bertrand Russell s wording in defining correspondence theory According to Prior Russell was substantially responsible for helping to make correspondence theory widely known under this name Encyclopedia of Philosophy Vol 2 Correspondence Theory of Truth by Arthur N Prior pp 223 224 Macmillan 1969 Encyclopedia of Philosophy Vol 2 Correspondence Theory of Truth by Arthur N Prior p 224 Macmillan 1969 Correspondence Theory of Truth in Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Summa I Q 16 A 2 Correspondence Theory of Truth in Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy citing De Veritate Q 1 A 1 and 3 cf Summa Theologiae Q 16 See e g Bradley F H On Truth and Copying in Blackburn et al eds 1999 Truth 31 45 Encyclopedia of Philosophy Vol 2 Correspondence Theory of Truth auth Arthur N Prior pp 223 ff Macmillan 1969 See especially sections on Moore s Correspondence Theory 225 226 Russell s Correspondence Theory 226 227 Ramsey and Later Wittgenstein 228 229 Tarski s Semantic Theory 230 231 Encyclopedia of Philosophy Vol 2 Correspondence Theory of Truth by Arthur N Prior p 223 ff Macmillan 1969 See section on Tarski s Semantic Theory 230 231 Immanuel Kant for instance assembled a controversial but quite coherent system in the early 19th century whose validity of meaning and usefulness continues to be debated even today Similarly the systems of Leibniz and Spinoza are characteristic systems that are internally coherent but controversial in terms of their utility and validity Encyclopedia of Philosophy Vol 2 Coherence Theory of Truth auth Alan R White p130 131 Macmillan 1969 Encyclopedia of Philosophy Vol 2 Coherence Theory of Truth auth Alan R White pp 131 133 see esp section on Epistemological assumptions Macmillan 1969 Encyclopedia of Philosophy Vol 2 Coherence Theory of Truth auth Alan R White p130 May Todd 1993 Between Genealogy and Epistemology Psychology politics in the thought of Michel Foucault with reference to Althusser and Balibar 1970 See e g Habermas Jurgen Knowledge and Human Interests English translation 1972 See e g Habermas Jurgen Knowledge and Human Interests English translation 1972 esp Part III pp 187ff Rescher Nicholas Pluralism Against the Demand for Consensus 1995 Encyclopedia of Philosophy Vol 5 Pragmatic Theory of Truth 427 Macmillan 1969 Peirce C S 1901 Truth and Falsity and Error in part pp 716 720 in James Mark Baldwin ed Dictionary of Philosophy and Psychology v 2 Peirce s section is entitled Logical beginning on p 718 column 1 and ending on p 720 with the initials C S P see Google Books Eprint Reprinted Collected Papers v 5 pp 565 573 James William The Meaning of Truth A Sequel to Pragmatism 1909 Encyclopedia of Philosophy Vol 2 Dewey John auth Richard J Bernstein p383 Macmillan 1969 Sahakian W S amp Sahakian M L Ideas of the Great Philosophers New York Barnes amp Noble 1966 Feynman Richard 1967 The Character of Physical Law MIT Press p 150 ISBN 9780262560030 G E Moore A Defence of Common Sense 1925 S N Ganguly Logical Positivism as a Theory of Meaning Allied Publishers 1967 p 180 Wittgenstein Ludwig 1999 Tractatus Logico Philosophicus Dover Publications Inc p 39 ISBN 0 486 40445 5 Chomsky Noam 1975 Reflections on Language Pantheom Book Chomsky Noam 1980 Rules and Representations Columbia University Press Chomsky Noam 2000 New Horizons in the Study of Language and Mind The MIT Press Chomsky Noam 2012 The Science of Language Interviews with James McGilvray Cambridge University Press Chomsky Noam 1975 The Logical Structure of Linguistic Theory University of Chicago Press Cipriani Enrico 2016 Some reflections on Chomsky s notion of reference Linguistics Beyond and within 2 44 60 doi 10 31743 lingbaw 5637 Rescorla Michael Convention The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Spring 2011 Edition Grigoris Antoniou John Slaney eds Advanced Topics in Artificial Intelligence Springer 1998 p 9 Further reading editAkmajian Adrian et al 1995 Linguistics an introduction to language and communication fourth edition Cambridge MIT Press Allan Keith 1986 Linguistic Meaning Volume One New York Routledge amp Kegan Paul Arena Leonardo Vittorio 2012 Nonsense as the Meaning ebook Austin J L 1962 How to Do Things With Words Cambridge Harvard University Press Berger Peter and Thomas Luckmann 1967 The Social Construction of Reality A Treatise in the Sociology of Knowledge first edition 240 pages Anchor Books Davidson Donald 2001 Inquiries into Truth and Interpretation second edition Oxford Oxford University Press Dummett Michael 1981 Frege Philosophy of Language second edition Cambridge Harvard University Press Frege Gottlob ed Michael Beaney 1997 The Frege Reader Oxford Blackwell Gauker Christopher 2003 Words without Meaning MIT Press Goffman Erving 1959 Presentation of Self in Everyday Life Anchor Books Grice Paul 1989 Studies in the Way of Words Cambridge Harvard University Press Searle John and Daniel Vanderveken 1985 Foundations of Illocutionary Logic Cambridge Cambridge University Press Searle John 1969 Speech Acts Cambridge Cambridge University Press Searle John 1979 Expression and Meaning Cambridge Cambridge University Press Stonier Tom 1997 Information and Meaning An Evolutionary Perspective London Springer External links edit Meaning and Communication Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Meaning and Context Sensitivity Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Meaning philosophy amp oldid 1172813860, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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