Davidson on learnable languages

Mind 87 (346):230-249 (1978)
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Abstract

It is argued that donald davidson has not succeeded in showing that we need a constructive theory of meaning--A theory for a natural language which davidson considers to have as its base a finite number of semantic primitives--In order to explain language learning and, In particular, Linguistic productivity. This linguistic productivity is the ability of a speaker who has mastered the meaning of a finite stock of words and a finite number of grammatical rules, To produce and understand sentences which he has not constructed or encountered before

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Citations of this work

In defense of Davidson.Ernest Lepore - 1982 - Linguistics and Philosophy 5 (2):277 - 294.
Quine's theory of logic.R. J. Haack - 1978 - Erkenntnis 13 (1):231 - 259.

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