Inferentialism, representationalism and derogatory words
Inferentialism, representationalism and derogatory words
In a recent paper, after outlining various distinguishing features of derogatory words, Jennifer Hornsby suggests that the phenomenon raises serious difficulties for inferentialism. Against Hornsby, I claim that derogatory words do not pose any insuperable problems for inferentialism, so long as it is supplemented with apparatus borrowed from Grice and Hare. Moreover, I argue, derogatory expressions pose difficulties for Hornsby’s favoured alternative theory of meaning, representationalism, unless it too is conjoined with a similar Grice/Hare mechanism. So, the upshot of the discussion is that, contra Hornsby, focus on derogatory expressions alone does not provide grounds for deciding between competing theories of meaning, but nevertheless serves to highlight important features that any such theory must acknowledge and incorporate.
inferentialism, representationalism, derogatory words, prescriptivism, language, philosophy
191-205
Whiting, Daniel
c0847bb4-963e-470d-92a2-5c8aae5d5aef
June 2007
Whiting, Daniel
c0847bb4-963e-470d-92a2-5c8aae5d5aef
Whiting, Daniel
(2007)
Inferentialism, representationalism and derogatory words.
International Journal of Philosophical Studies, 15 (2), .
(doi:10.1080/09672550701383483).
Abstract
In a recent paper, after outlining various distinguishing features of derogatory words, Jennifer Hornsby suggests that the phenomenon raises serious difficulties for inferentialism. Against Hornsby, I claim that derogatory words do not pose any insuperable problems for inferentialism, so long as it is supplemented with apparatus borrowed from Grice and Hare. Moreover, I argue, derogatory expressions pose difficulties for Hornsby’s favoured alternative theory of meaning, representationalism, unless it too is conjoined with a similar Grice/Hare mechanism. So, the upshot of the discussion is that, contra Hornsby, focus on derogatory expressions alone does not provide grounds for deciding between competing theories of meaning, but nevertheless serves to highlight important features that any such theory must acknowledge and incorporate.
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Inferentialism,_Representationalism_and_Derogatory_Words_-_Daniel_Whiting.pdf
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Published date: June 2007
Keywords:
inferentialism, representationalism, derogatory words, prescriptivism, language, philosophy
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Local EPrints ID: 52405
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/52405
ISSN: 0967-2559
PURE UUID: 6f39bfc0-b4c5-4914-9549-68fbbe41e9b1
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Date deposited: 26 Jun 2008
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 10:36
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