Principia: An International Journal of Epistemology (Dec 2005)

Davidson's Criticism of the Proximal Theory of Meaning

  • Dirk Greimann

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 09, no. 1-2
pp. 73 – 86

Abstract

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According to the proximal theory of meaning, which is to be found in Quine’s early writings, meaning is determined completely by the correla-tion of sentences with sensory stimulations. Davidson tried to show that this theory is untenable because it leads to a radical form of skepticism. The present paper aims to show, first, that Davidson’s criticism is not sound, and, second, that nonetheless the proximal theory is untenable because it has a very similar and equally unacceptable consequence: it implies that the truth-value of ordinary sentences like ‘Snow is white’ is completely determined by the properties of the speaker, not by the prop-erties of the objects to which these sentences refer.

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