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Philosophy of Language PDF

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PHILOSOPHY OF LANGUAGE SYNTHESE LIBRARY MONOGRAPHS ON EPISTEMOLOGY, LOGIC, METHODOLOGY, PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE, SOCIOLOGY OF SCIENCE AND OF KNOWLEDGE, AND OF THE MATHEMATICAL METHODS OF SOCIAL AND BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES Managing Editor: Jaakko H intikka, Academy of Finland and Stanford University Editors: Robert S. Cohen, Boston University D onaldD avidson, The Rockefeller University and Princeton University Gabriel N uchelmans, University of Leyden W esley C. Salmon, University of Arizona VOLUME 71 FRANZ VON KUTSCHERA PHILOSOPHY OF LANGUAGE D. REIDEL PUBLISHING COMPANY DORDRECHT-HOLLAND / BOSTON-U.S. A. Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Kutschera, Franz von. Philosophy of language. (Synthese library; v. 71) Translation of Sprachphilosophie. Originally given as lectures at the Universitat Munchen and the Universitat Regensburg. Bibliography: p. Includes indexes. 1. Languages—Philosophy. I. Title. P106.K8514 401 75-12877 ISBN-13: 978-94-010-1822-7 e-ISBN-13: 978-94-010-1820-3 DOI: 10.1007/978-94-010-1820-3 SPRACHPHILOSOPHIE Second edition published in 1975 by Wilhelm Fink Verlag, Munich Translated from the German by Burnham Terrell Published by D. Reidel Publishing Company, P.O. Box 17, Dordrecht, Holland Sold and distributed in the U.S.A., Canada and Mexico by D. Reidel Publishing Company, Inc. 306 Dartmouth Street, Boston, Mass. 02116, U.S.A. All Rights Reserved Copyright © 1975 by D. Reidel Publishing Company, Dordrecht, Holland No part of this book may be reproduced in any form, by print, photoprint, microfilm, or any other means, without written permission from the publisher TABLE OF CONTENTS AUTHOR’S PREFACE VII INTRODUCTION 1 CHAPTER I / PRELIMINARY DISTINCTIONS 5 1. Language and Linguistic Utterances 5 2. Descriptive Statements 13 3. The Use and Mention of Signs 17 CHAPTER II / THEORIES OF MEANING 19 1. Realistic Semantic Theories 19 2. Behavioristic Theories of Meaning 59 3. Quine’s Philosophy of Language 73 4. Wittgenstein’s Philosophy of Language in the Philosophical Investigations 105 CHAPTER III / THEORIES OF GRAMMAR 165 1. Traditional Grammar 169 2. Logical Grammar 182 3. Generative Grammar 218 CHAPTER IV / LANGUAGE AND REALITY 242 1. The Thesis of the Role Language Plays in Experience 242 2. The Role of Vocabulary 255 3. The Role of Grammar 261 4. The Epistemological Problematic of the Relativity Thesis 278 BIBLIOGRAPHY 291 INDEX OF SUBJECTS 301 INDEX OF LOGICAL SYMBOLS 305 AUTHOR’S PREFACE This book has arisen out of lectures I gave in recent years at the Uni­ versities of Munich and Regensburg, and it is intended to serve as a textbook for courses in the Philosophy of Language. In my lectures I was able to presuppose that the students had taken an introductory course in logic. Some knowledge of logic will also be helpful in studying this book - as it is almost everywhere else in philosophy -, especially in Section 3.2, but it is no prerequisite. I would like to give my sincere thanks to Prof. Terrell for his excellent translation of the book, which is based on the second, revised and en­ larged German edition. Regensburg, May 1975 Franz von Kutschera INTRODUCTION Language has become one of philosophy’s most important and pressing themes during this century. This preoccupation with language has its ori­ gins in the most diverse areas of philosophical inquiry. It has come from the theory of knowledge by way of a turn from the critique of reason to a critique of language; from logic as a consequence of its concern with arti­ ficial languages and the logical analysis of natural languages; and from anthropology by way of the emphasis on language as an accomplishment essential to the definition of man and through the discovery of correlations between linguistic form and man’s image of the world; from ethics be­ cause of its concern with the linguistic forms of ethical statements and the demarcation of the boundary between them and descriptive sentences. This philosophical turn in the direction of language can also be read off in quite general terms from the change in the formulation of philosoph­ ical problems. Where a question used to be raised about ‘the nature of causality’, for example, or ‘the content of the concept of causality’, now­ adays we feel it more appropriate to formulate the problem as a question about the use of words, and to ask: “What is one saying when he says that an event A brings about an event 2??”1 During the course of this development philosophical attention has sometimes concentrated so exclusively on language that it has simply been identified with linguistic analysis. This is especially true of the two main streams of analytical philosophy. It is true of the enterprise, beginning with Bertrand Russell and continuing from Rudolf Carnap to Nelson Goodman and Willard van Orman Quine, aimed at a logical analysis of the language of science, especially of philosophical language, in which the attempt is made to clarify and make precise the terms and propositions of that language by using the instruments of modern logic. It is still more true of the other principal direction of analytical philosophy, originating in George Edward Moore, then stamped with the distinctive mark of Ludwig Wi-genstein and developed further by the Ordinary- Language-Philosophy of the Oxford School (Gilbert Ryle, John Lang- 2 INTRODUCTION shaw Austin), in which the attempt is made to clarify philosophical lan­ guage by analyzing the ordinary usage of its terms. In the Foreword to his Begrijfschrift, Gottlob Frege says: “If it is one of philosophy’s tasks to liberate the human mind from the dominion of the word, by revealing the illusions concerning conceptual relationships engendered, often almost unavoidably, by linguistic usage, by freeing our thought from the burden imposed on it by nothing but the structure of our linguistic instruments of expression, then my Begrijfschrift (concep­ tual notation), further developed for these purposes, will be a useful tool for philosophers.” 2 Frege’s ‘if’-sentence then turns into a categorical assertion and for Russell himself the most important task for philosophy consists “in criticizing and clarifying notions which are apt to be regarded as funda­ mental and accepted uncritically. As instances I might mention: mind, matter, consciousness, knowledge, experience, causality, will, time.”3 And Carnap writes in the Foreword to the 2nd Edition of his book, Der logische Aufbau der Welt: “The new definitions [of the concepts] should fit into a systematic structure of concepts. Such a clarification of concepts, nowadays frequently called ‘explication’, still seems to me one of the most important tasks of philosophy.”4 For Wittgenstein even as early as the Tractatus, all philosophy is language analysis5 and in the Philosophical Investigations philosophy is nothing but a constant struggle against “the bewitchment of our intelli­ gence by means of language.”6 Finally, for many adherents of Ordinary- Language-Philosophy, the turn taken by philosophy to language, the ‘linguistic turn’, signifies the great revolution of modern philosophy. Thus Austin says: “...it cannot be doubted that they [these methods of linguistic analysis] are producing a revolution in philosophy. If anyone wishes to call it the greatest and most salutary in its history, this is not, if you come to think of it, a large claim.”7 In view of the large number of enterprises and directions that are grouped together under the heading of a philosophy of language, it can be no wonder that the title has no precise and well-defined content. We will therefore sketch briefly the themes with which this work is supposed to be concerned and the objectives that guide us in it. Speaking quite generally to begin with, we will be investigating in what follows the functional role of language, and the results accomplished by it.

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