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Quine: Two dogmas of empiricism

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Title: Quine: Two dogmas of empiricism


1
Quine Two dogmas of empiricism
  • Nyelv és elme, 2007 márc. 21.

2
1. Intro analyticity
  • Meaning is something over and above extension.
  • Essentialism If there are essences, then it is
    entities in the world that have them. Essential
    properties, when assigned a semantic duty, can
    become meanings. Human has an extension, but
    this extension is determined, delineated by the
    essence of being human (e.g., being intelligent,
    according to Aristotle).
  • Quine meanings should not be regarded as
    objects. They should not be construed analogously
    with reference.
  • Instead, the business of a theory of mening is to
    provide criteria for the synonymy of linguistic
    forms.

3
  • Analytic means true by meaning. However, this
    is not exactly the same as logical truth.
  • (1) Unmarried men are unmarried men.
    (uncontroversial a logical truth.)
  • (2) Bachelors are unmarried men.
  • Now, (2) can be turned into a logical truth (1)
    if we suppose that bachelor and unmarried man
    are synonymous.
  • ? If we wish to clarify analyticity, we confront
    the problem of synonymy.

4
Carnaps proposal
  • Take a set of atomic statements of a language.
    (Say, these are simple sentences with the logical
    form of applying predicates to arguments.) So we
    have a finite set of sentences S1,SN.
  • Assign a truth value to each such sentence (? a
    state description). This can be done in
    different ways.
  • The TV of complex sentences is derived from the
    atomic ones by laws of logic.
  • An analytic statement is then one which comes out
    true under every state description. E.g., (S1 ?
    S2)or(S1 S2)

5
Problem
  • No two members of the atomic set can contain
    synonyms.
  • For else SiJohn is married and Sj John is a
    bachelor can both be assigned TRUE in a state
    description. But then, the derived complex
    sentence No bachelors are married is not true
    in every state description, therefore it is
    synthetic.
  • The proposal is good for logical truth, but not
    for the second form of analyticity which
    presupposes synonymy.

6
2. Definitions
  • Why cant we define bachelor by unmarried
    man, thereby securing synonymy?
  • Three varieties definitions
  • V1) Lexicography. We write down what is used in
    the language as synonymous. (So this presupposes
    synonymy.)
  • BTW, are bachelor and unmarried man
    synonymous? Any counterexamples that come to
    mind?
  • V2) Explication. The goal is to paraphrase, and
    sharpen the definition, to supplement or refine
    the meaning of the definiendum especially in
    some unusual contexts. Example How should we use
    bachelor in the contexts that serve as
    counterexample above? OR spelling out
    psychological concepts like thinking, memory,
    etc.

7
  • Quine says, explication also presupposes
    synonymy. For the goal is to preserve the range
    of linguistic contexts in which the definiendum
    and the definiens can replace one another, and
    extend the replaceability by refining the
    definiens.
  • More examples of explication
  • (3) Amnesia is a loss of memory or learning
    ability.
  • Well, refine major types of amnesia constitute
    losses only of certain kinds of memories and
    learning ability.
  • Or consciousness is divided by some into access
    consciousness and phenomenal consciousness, both
    being described in detail.
  • Quine What we improve upon here is the
    antecedently existing synonymy. We wish to extend
    synonymy by explication. So we presuppose it.

8
  • V3) Abbreviation. This is really transparent, and
    does not rest on synonymy.
  • Thus, either definitions capture only logical
    truths, or they presuppose the notion of
    synonymy.
  • As an example of the former, think of programming
    languages the assembler code of a processor is a
    very simple language, and the definitions of the
    even simplest operations of the computer in it
    are quite complicated. High-level programming
    languages contain elementary operations - like
    fprintf in C that are themselves constituted
    by a complex assembler code.
  • Note, however, that mathematical definitions
    like the definition of a convergent series can
    still be illuminating, or explicative.

9
3. Interchangeability
  • Starting idea If two words A and B are synonyms,
    then they can replace each other in every
    linguistic context except direct quotation, salva
    veritate.
  • A refinement we are interested in cognitive
    synonymy. Idiosyncratic associations, poetic
    quality do not count from the point of view of
    (cognitive) synonymy.
  • If All and only bachelors are unmarried men is
    analytic, then bachelor and unmarried man are
    cognitive synonyms.
  • But now we want an account of synonymy which does
    not presuppose analyticity.

10
Is interchangeability sufficient for cognitive
synonymy?
  • (4) ??x(Bx ? Bx) a logical truth
  • (5) ??x(Bx ? UMx)
  • This would be the criterion of cognitive
    synonymy.
  • (Plus, in this case, the following sentence
  • (6) ?x(Bx ? UMx)
  • is analytic.)
  • BUT now the problem is that synonymy is defined
    as substitutivity in linguistic contexts that
    contain necessary. But what is this operator?
  • Prefixing a sentence S with necessarily yields
    a truth only if S is, well, analytic. What was
    thrown out of the door comes back through the
    window.

11
Drop necessarily
  • Now the language becomes extensional, and
    substitutivity salva veritate only assumes
    extansional agreement, for example, the truth of
    (6) above
  • (6) ?x(Bx ? UMx)
  • But this wont do. Extensional agreement does not
    rest on meaning, only on matters of fact that
    could be otherwise. (E.g., dog and Johns
    favourite animal may be coextensive, but surely
    not identical in meaning!)
  • Thus if we drop necessarily from our language,
    then substitutivity is insufficient for synonymy.
  • In sum, cognitive synonymy presupposes
    substitutivity PLUS intensional operators (like
    necessarily), which in turn lead us back to
    analyticity.

12
Pause for a moment
  • Note the contrast between Kripke and Quine
  • Kripke embraces possible worlds, essentialism,
    and de re necessity.
  • Quine rejects all of these notions (for Quine,
    necessity is exhausted by derivability in logic
    and the theory of numbers). This results in a
    rather austere ontology, and a skeptical view of
    semantics.
  • For Kripke, intensions, propositions, and
    necessity can all be accounted for in terms of
    possible worlds.

13
Give it another try
  • If analytic is secured non-circularly, then
    necessity can be spelled out in terms of
    analyticity (see above), and synonymy can be
    spelled out as substitutivity in a language which
    contains the intensional notion necessarily.
  • According to this line, singular terms A and
    B are synonyms if A is B is analytic.
  • Statements p and q are synonymous if p?q is
    analytic.

14
4. Semantical rules and analyticity
  • Idea Perhaps the analytic-synthetic distinction
    becomes clear in a precisely formulated
    artificial language, plus certain semantical
    rules.
  • Quines reply here the problem is kicked
    upstairs, instead of being solved. semantical
    rule creates just as big a problem as
    analytic.
  • Truth is a matter of both language and fact. So,
    perhaps analytic statements are those which are
    somehow devoid of the factual content? This leads
    us to the second dogma.

15
5. The second dogma the verification theory of
meaning
  • The theory the meaning of a statement is the
    method of empirically confirming or refuting it.
  • An analytic statement is one which is confirmed
    regardless of the output of any method of
    confirmation.
  • Two statements are synonymous iff their method of
    confirmation is the same.
  • We can perhaps bring this down to the level of
    words two words are synonymous iff, whenever one
    replaces the other in a sentence, we get a
    synonymous sentence.
  • If this works, then, via synonymy, we save
    analyticity as well.

16
What are the methods of confirmation?
  • Radical reductionism (Locke, Hume) Every
    meaningful sentence is translatable into a
    statement about immediate experiance. To each
    synthetic statement there corresponds a unique
    range of sensory events that adds to the
    likelihood of its truth.
  • A term is meaningful only if it names a sense
    datum or a compound of sense data.
  • Even when thoroughly formalized (Carnap), this
    method did not even get close to defining, in
    terms of sense data, simple statements such as
    There is a table in front of me.

17
Connection between the two dogmas
  • Analytic statements are those which stand
    confirmed in any circumstances of sensory events.
  • Quines critique there is such a thing as
    empirical confirmation, but its units are not
    statements (let alone words), but rather, whole
    theories.
  • Our knowledge of the world is thought of as a
    network of statements (sentences). The periphery
    is constituted by sentences which are more
    susceptible to sensory input. The center is less
    so. However, sometimes even the most central
    elements of the network may be affected (quantum
    mechanics and the excluded middle).
  • Analyticity becomes a matter of degree.

18
Verificationism
  • Of the above, Quine accepts the idea that meaning
    is determined by methods of confirmation.
    However, he thinks that confirmation is holistic
    sentences are not supported in isolation.

19
II. Quine on language and linguistic knowledge
  • Supposing that there are rules that guide
    language users, the linguist should be able to
    discover them (and rule out the alternatives).
  • Quine This cannot be done, and the suggested
    conclusion is that there is no unique set of
    rules governing language use. Let alone knowledge
    of such rules.
  • Quines argument radical translation is
    impossible, and that prevents us from attributing
    knowledge of linguistic rules.

20
Radical translation
  • Imagine you come across a new tribe in the
    Brazilian jungle, and the task is to interpret
    their language to find out word-meanings and
    rules of grammar.
  • This situation is entirely different from
    second-language learning. There are no
    familiar-sounding words, no teacher who speaks
    both languages, etc.

21
  • Walking along one day on the newly-discovered
    coast of Australia, Captain Cook saw an
    extraordinary animal leaping through the bush.
       "What's that?" he asked one of the aborigines
    accompanying him.   "Uh - gangurru." he replied
    - or something like that. Captain Cook duly noted
    down the name of the peculiar beast as
    'Kangaroo'.Some time later, Cook had the
    opportunity to compare notes with Captain King,
    and mentioned the kangaroo.   "No, no, Cook",
    said King, "the word for that animal is 'meenuah'
    - I've checked it carefully.   "So what does
    'kangaroo' mean?""Well, I think," said King "it
    probably means something like 'I don't know'...

Source http//www.consciousentities.com/gavagai.h
tm
I dont know
22
Gavagai
  • The anthropologist sees a rabbit hopping out of
    the grass, and hears the informant saying
    Gavagai.
  • This could mean a lot of things, not just
    Rabbit, or Look, a rabbit. For instance
  • (i) Be quiet (do not frighten it off)
  • (ii) That animal is dangerous (the informant saw
    rabid rabbits earlier)
  • (iii) Look, a furry animal
  • (iv) What animal is that?
  • (v) That is not a rabbit (error)
  • Additional evidence can rule out some of these
    hypotheses if the informant speaks loudly that
    makes (i) unlikely if he approaches the animal,
    that rules out (ii). Etc.

23
  • Further progress Pick up a rabbit, point at it,
    and ask the informant Gavagai?
  • The informant says a short word in response
    does it mean yes or no?
  • Perhaps Gavagai means not a rabbit, and the
    informants response means no, or Gavagai means
    rabbit, and the reponse means yes (or Gavagai
    means rabbit, and the response means no, because
    the informant is in error).
  • The interpretation of one utterance depends on
    that of the other or that of many others. The
    first step toward holism.

24
  • Each entry in the translation manual depends on
    the whole system including many other beliefs of
    the informant. Any experience can be made
    consistent with a given entry by making
    adjustments elsewhere in the system.
  • If, on seeing an elephant approaching the
    informant says Gavagai excitedly, he may still
    mean rabbit, assuming that he believes that
    approaching elephants make rabbits hiding in the
    grass hop out and escape.
  • Or what if the informant tries to mislead the
    anthropologist?
  • Verificationism and sentence meaning Quine
    argues thus
  • (i) Evidence for the truth of a sentence is
    identical with the meaning of the sentence
  • (ii) Due to holism, sentences in separation have
    no confirmation conditions
  • (iii) Sentences do not have meaning.

25
Quines conclusion
  • The linguist attempting the radical translation
    could in principle construct various incompatible
    systems which make equally good sense of the
    speakers.
  • Manuals for translating one language into
    another can be set up in divergent ways all
    compatible with the totality of speech
    dispositions, yet incompatible with one another.
  • Two possible interpretations
  • (1) There is a fact of the matter regarding the
    rules that govern the speakers utterances, but
    there is no way to find it out (underdetermination
    ). Empirical data in general underdetermine our
    theories.
  • (2) There is no fact of the matter about the
    rules. There is nothing there to be found out
    (indeterminacy)
  • But what reason can there be to advance from (1)
    to (2)?

26
Eliminativism about meaning
  • There is no fact about rules governing language
    this, for Quine, includes facts about meaning.
    The argument, as we saw, starts from radical
    translation.
  • The idea of indeterminacy is closely linked to
    Quines conviction that notions like innate
    linguistic knowledge, I-language, and the like,
    are untenable myths.
  • Language, for Quine, is social behaviour, and for
    reasons stated above, verbal behaviour cannot
    determine a unique theory of meaning. (There will
    always be different and mutually incompatible
    systems of interpretation.)
  • I hope everyone sees how the Chomskian assumption
    of I-language and innate knowledge affects this
    view.

27
Stimulus meaning
  • Sentences, although devoid of real meaning
    according to Quine, still have stimulus meaning.
  • The affirmative stimulus meaning of a sentence S
    is the class of stimulus patterns that would
    prompt assent to S. (This class includes real
    rabbits, rabbit representations, and other things
    which indicate rabbits.)
  • Negative stimulus meaning is the class of stimuli
    that prompt dissent.

28
Stimulus meaning and real meaning
  • Alas, says Quine, stimulus meaning does not
    capture real meaning, that is, the situations
    in which the expression in question is correctly
    used. There are four possibilities

Expression not used correctly
Expression correctly used
?1 The guide feels the smell of bears in the
forest, and hears bearish noises. He warns his
cohort Look out, there is a bear here. But
in fact he is mistaken, there is no bear
nearby. ?2 Cases in which we do not recognize a
familiar object due to unfamiliar circumstances.
(Gaurisanker and Everest)
Affirmative stimulus meaning present
?1
Affirmative stimulus meaning absent
?2
29
Another argument to the same effect
  • Whether words have stimulus meaning at all is
    questionable. (Unlike sentences which at least
    have stimulus meaning.)
  • Can words prompt assent/dissent? Well, at least
    in the context of pointing and naming they might.
    In such a case one could argue that it is the
    utterance of the word embedded in the context of
    pointing which has the logical form of a simple
    sentence. (E.g., point at an object and say
    bycicle, and thereby mean that is a bycicle.)
  • Apply this to radical translation You point at a
    rabbit and utter Gavagai, the informant shows
    obvious signs of assent. OK, word meaning
    deciphered?
  • Quine What if the informant means by Gavagai
    temporal rabbit slice, or undetached rabbit part?

30
No stimulus meaning? no meaning
  • For Quine, language is a social art that is,
    exclusively behaviour.
  • Utterances mean by their use being conditioned to
    sensory stimuli. There are no facts
  • - about language beyond behaviour, and
  • - about meaning beyond sensory stimulation.
  • Which means, if real meaning is supposed to be
    something over and above stimulus meaning, then
    it is a fiction.

31
What is Quines positive view?
  • Synonymy is not a notion which we can make sense
    of in this framework.
  • When we paraphrase a sentence to resolve its
    ambiguity, what we obtain is not a synonymous
    sentence, but rather one that is less ambiguous
    (and therefore more informative).
  • Canonical notation in logic (regimentation)
  • Notation systems (the formalizing of natural
    language) has to be a partial notation for
    disccourse on all subjects.
  • Canonical re-writing has to be shallow one need
    not introduce more logical structure than what
    seems useful. Embedded in the notation logically
    simple components may correspond to terms with
    highly complex content.
  • ?x(human(x) ? mortal(x)) we may not be
    interested in what it is to be mortal, for
    instance. In which case, we make no effort to
    spell out formally what is predicated by this
    word. We do so only if there is a point.

32
Regimentation and science
  • The simplification and clarification in logical
    theory is an algorithmic plus conceptual task.
  • Logical reduction aims at simplifications of our
    scientific conceptual schemes it is a quest of
    ultimate categories or the most general traits of
    reality.
  • In this, logic is similar to physics both are
    about the world, and at the same time both
    logical and physical theories contain elements of
    convention (and conventional elements in both
    theories are controlled by reality in some way).

33
Modality
  • According to Quine, the concept of necessity
    comes from that of analiticity.
  • Quine suggests that no sharp distinction between
    analytic (logical) truths and synthetic ones
    (reports of the world) can be maintained. Such a
    distinction is not compatible with his view of
    how language works.
  • The associative network of sentences (ANS)
    picture
  • - The objects of propositional attitudes are
    sentences (and not propositions).
  • - The sentences that we can entertain constitute
    the nodes of an associative network. The
    sentences are associated on the basis of either
    causal or logical connections. The connec-tions
    are associations, and as such they are
    conditioned, but how they become conditioned
    depends on the logical and causal relations of
    the sentences.

34
  • Thus, there is no sharp analytic-synthetic
    distinction, but there are sentences that are
    less easy to dispense with.
  • Dropping a logical law together with its
    connections would severely distort the whole
    system that is, sentences about laws of logic
    are quite central in the ANS.
  • However, notice that it makes little sense to
    declare both 224 and Bachelors are unmarried
    men analytic, therefore necessary. What
    immediately comes to mind is that the latter
    sentence has counterexamples, it is somehow less
    firmly secured than the former.
  • No kidding, 224 would be very hard to reject,
    it would likely turn our system upside down.
  • Still, quantum mechanical research raised the
    idea of revising the principle of the excluded
    middle another, apparently rock-solid principle
    of logic and math.

35
  • It is logically necessary that 224 has a
    considerable intuitive force, but It is
    logically necessary that a cyclist has two legs
    sounds awkward nothing of what we are inclined
    to call logical necessity is involved here.
  • The closer we approach the periphery of the ANS
    the more obviously what we have thought to be
    logical necessity turns out to be mere rules of
    use.

36
Intentionality
  • When we turn from stimulus synonymous occasion
    sentences to the construing of the meanings of
    terms, we face indeterminacy there will be many
    distinct hypotheses which are underdetermined by
    verbal dispositions.
  • Traditionally, the notion of intentional content
    was supposed to solve the indeterminacy
  • ?rabbit-elicited mental states, perceptions and
    sentences were supposed to be about rabbits - to
    pick out rabbits uniquely and unambiguously.
    (This would be an essentialist or universalist
    picture.)

37
  • But the whole story about the indeterminacy of
    translation shows that there seems to be no
    straightforward way in which such generalized
    properties as rabbitness and the like could be
    derived.
  • No cross-cultural invariance in stimulation-term
    transitions can be expected instead, there are
    many different possible transitions (determined
    to a great extent by the culture- or language
    specific structure of the ANS), all with
    different outcomes.
  • To summarize, the Quinian view offers partial,
    more context-dependent treatments to the problem
    of indeterminacy, and not a gratuitous or at
    least suspicious overall notion (like
    intentionality).

38
Where to escape if we dont like this story?
  • If we argue successfully that language is more
    than mere behaviour, then that substantially
    weakens Quines position about language.
  • 1. Convincing evidence about creative language
    use in children, and poverty-of-the-stimulus type
    of arguments would tend to refute Quines thesis
    in Word and Object
  • In acquiring it i.e., language we have to
    depend entirely on intersubjectively available
    cues as to what to say and when.
  • 2. The acquisition of word meanings (Gleitman,
    Landau, etc.) there are governing implicit
    assumptions, like a new name is that for a so far
    unknown object whole object is chosen,
    identification is based promarily on shape, etc.)
  • Note that these studies were actually inspired by
    Quines work.
  • 3. Any convincing argument/evidence for universal
    grammar.

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