Overlooking Conventions: The Trouble with Linguistic Pragmatism

Springer Verlag (2021)
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Abstract

This book criticizes the methodology of the recent semantics-pragmatics debate in the theory of language and proposes an alternative. It applies this methodology to argue for a traditional view against a group of “contextualists” and “pragmatists”, including Sperber and Wilson, Bach, Carston, Recanati, Neale, and many others. The author disagrees with these theorists who hold that the meaning of the sentence in an utterance never, or hardly ever, yields its literal truth-conditional content, even after disambiguation and reference fixing; it needs to be pragmatically supplemented in context. The standard methodology of this debate is to consult intuitions. The book argues that theories should be tested against linguistic usage. Theoretical distinctions, however intuitive, need to be scientifically motivated. Also we should not be guided by Grice’s “Modified Occam’s Razor”, Ruhl’s “Monosemantic Bias”, or other such strategies for “meaning denialism”. From this novel perspective, the striking examples of context relativity that motivate contextualists and pragmatists typically exemplify semantic rather than pragmatic properties. In particular, polysemous phenomena should typically be treated as semantic ambiguity. The author argues that conventions have been overlooked, that there’s no extensive “semantic underdetermination” and that the new theoretical framework of “truth-conditional pragmatics” is a mistake.

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Chapters

Confusion of the Metaphysics of Meaning with the Epistemology of Interpretation

This confusion is the Second Methodological Flaw of Linguistic Pragmatism. There is an obvious difference between the study of the properties of utterances – what is said and what is meant – and the study of how hearers interpret utterances. We might say that the former study is concerned with the m... see more

The Semantics-Pragmatics Distinction

I argue that the theoretical basis we need for distinctions in the semantics-pragmatics dispute is to be found by noting that languages are representational systems of symbols that scientists attribute to species to explain their communicative behaviors. We then have a powerful theoretical interest ... see more

Sub-Sententials: Pragmatics or Semantics?

Stainton points out that speakers “can make assertions while speaking sub-sententially”. He argues for a “pragmatics-oriented approach” to these phenomena and against a “semantics-oriented approach”. In contrast, I argue for a semantics-oriented approach: typically, what is asserted by a sub-sentent... see more

Bach and Neale on “What Is Said”

Bach has an austere notion of what-is-said. It includes properties of an utterance arising from conventions, disambiguations, and the reference fixing of pure indexicals but excludes properties arising from the reference fixing of demonstratives, pronouns, and proper names. What a speaker says using... see more

Referential Descriptions: A Case Study

Referentially used definite descriptions should be explained semantically and not pragmatically in either a Gricean or Relevance-Theoretic way. The Argument from Convention provides the positive case: not only can we use descriptions referentially, we regularly do so. Indeed, the vast majority of us... see more

Polysemy and Pragmatism’s Challenge

The regular use of a polysemous expression with a certain meaning is typically a semantic phenomenon not a pragmatic one: absent novel spur-of-the-moment modifications or implicatures, the polyseme typically contributes one of its encoded meanings, selected in context, to the message of an utterance... see more

Reliance on Intuitions

How should we discover the truth about language? The received view among Linguistic Pragmatists, indeed among philosophers of language generally, is that we should proceed by consulting intuitions about language. I argue that this is a mistake and constitutes the First Methodological Flaw of Linguis... see more

Saturation and Pragmatism’s Challenge

The challenge posed by Linguistic Pragmatists stems from many examples of context relativity. In arguing for a semantic explanation of these, I divide them into two groups, one concerned with saturations, discussed in this chapter, the other concerned with polysemy, discussed in the next. I argue th... see more

Introduction

This chapter first provides a background to the semantics-pragmatics dispute. It then describes the main methodological and substantive conclusions of the book. Finally, it summarizes the chapters of the book.

Speaker Meanings and Intentions

There is much talk of intentions in semantics that I argue is mistaken: In virtue of what does a speaker using a name or demonstrative refer to x? A popular answer is: because he intends to refer to x. I have four objections. This answer, unlike another popular one – because he has x in mind – is to... see more

Modified Occam’s Razor and Meaning Denialism

Grice’s “Modified Occam’s Razor” is one conservative strategy for excluding new meanings: “Senses are not to be multiplied beyond necessity”. This is taken to advise against positing a new sense wherever there is a pragmatic derivation of the message from an uncontroversial old sense, without any co... see more

Linguistic Conventions and Language

Conventions are important to a theory of language because they are the typical cause of a linguistic expression having its meaning. But, contrary to what some seem to think, conventions do not constitute the meanings of a language. And a linguistic convention is not constituted by the regularity it ... see more

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Michael Devitt
CUNY Graduate Center

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