After a quote from Feyerabend he considers what would be involved in the case where the content was held firm while the conceptual scheme changes, and one finds oneself in a different world.
A favourite argument of mine comes next, one I have borrowed many times, so I will quote at length:
Suppose that in my office of Min- ister of Scientific Language I want the new man to stop using words that refer, say, to emotions, feelings, thoughts and inten- tions, and to talk instead of the physiological states and happen- ings that are assumed to be more or less identical with the mental riff and raff. How do I tell whether my advice has been heeded if the new man speaks a new language? For all I know, the shiny new phrases, though stolen from the old language in which they refer to physiological stirrings, may in his mouth play the role of the messy old mental concepts.
Thus falls the Churchland's attempt to eliminate folk psychology. — Banno
Yet the totality of such English sentences uniquely determines the extension of the concept of truth for English.
in which "s" is some statement and "p" is a translation of that statement.s is true IFF p
s is true IFF p
When I say model, I mean mathematical, or at least computational. Davidson seems to see conceptual schema (or at least the claim of conceptual schema which he is dismantling) as a filing cabinet with all the content (the way the world is) filed away. I see conceptual schemes more as rules for behaviour, not content-mediated at all. — Isaac
Notice that the "p" on the left is quoted, not used - I have had so many arguments with folk on these fora simply because they didn't... — Banno
We ought also note Tarski's generalisation.
s is true IFF p
in which "s" is some statement and "p" is a translation of that statement. — Banno
Nothing is in principle untranslatable, but in practice in so many cases, life's too short. — unenlightened
We could not know that some untranslatable conceptual scheme was indeed true.
Hence, the very idea of a true, untranslatable conceptual scheme is incoherent. — Banno
He said something like that? — Banno
I do not think that conceptual schemes inhere in the mind without or prior to language. To quite the contrary... — creativesoul
This is a thread about Davidson. I've enough to do with just that. — Banno
I get a bit pissed off with folk - not you, of course - who think philosophy is easy. — Banno
Did you read the article linked in the OP. — Banno
First, then, the purported cases of complete failure. It is tempting to take a very short line indeed: nothing, it may be said, could count as evidence that some form of activity could not be interpreted in our language that was not at the same time evidence that that form of activity was not speech behavior. If this were right, we probably ought to hold that a form of activity that cannot be interpreted as language in our language is not speech behavior. Putting matters this way is unsatisfactory, however, for it comes to little more than making translatability into a familiar tongue a criterion of languagehood. — Davidson, Conceptual Schema, pg.7
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