I dip into these matters only to distinguish them from the problem raised by malapropisms and the like. The problems touched on in the last two paragraphs all concern the ability to interpret words and constructions of the kind covered by our conditions (1)–(3); the questions have been what is required for such interpretation, and to what extent various competencies should be considered linguistic.
But part of the burden of this paper is that much that they ((i.e., competent interpreters)) can do ought not to count as part of their basic linguistic competence.
Whether knowledge of these principles ought to be included in the description of linguistic competence may not have to be settled: on the one hand they are things a clever person could often figure out without previous training or exposure and they are things we could get along without.
Malapropisms introduce expressions not covered by prior learning, or familiar expressions which cannot be interpreted by any of the abilities so far discussed. Malapropisms fall into a different category, one that may include such things as our ability to perceive a well-formed sentence when the actual utterance was incomplete or grammatically garbled, our ability to interpret words we have never heard before, to correct slips of the tongue, or to cope with new idiolects.
The argument seems at first blush to be that malapropisms cannot, by their very nature, be subsumed and accounted for by such conventions of language. Is that the whole of Davidson's argument, and is it cogent? — Banno
When I first read this paper many years ago, I had not read Grice yet, so all of the nods to Grice went right by me. Now that I have read and thought about Grice a fair amount, the invocation of Grice here and there is just puzzling. I'll think about that too. — Srap Tasmaner
Malapropism is exhibited in the relationship between two sentences, in that a sentence exhibits malapropism if it is different to the sentence the interpreter was expecting. — RussellA
"We must give up the idea of a clearly defined shared structure which language-users acquire and then apply to cases" — RussellA
Whose idea is this exactly? — JerseyFlight
I think we're talking about almost every cognitive scientist since Chomsky. — Srap Tasmaner
the relation between intention and meaning seems fraught. — Banno
"I conclude that there is no such thing as a language, not if a language is anything like what many philosophers and linguists have supposed. There is therefore no such thing to be learned, mastered, or born with."
This is a mere formal conclusion in the sense that there is something to be learned. You would indeed teach your child a language. The sense in which there is no language doesn't matter! — JerseyFlight
Then what did you make of Davidson relying on it finally in his definition of "first meaning"? — Srap Tasmaner
That would be in line witht he semantic theory Davidson earlier advocated. hence, the three principles listed make no mention of intent.a complex system or theory with the speaker, a system which makes possible the articulation of logical relations between utterances, and explains the ability to interpret novel utterances in an organized way.
You don't teach a child a language where "a language" is defined as a complete set of rules that rigidly specify what constitutes the language. You do teach a child a language where "a language" is defined as open ended, loosely specified, ever-changing linguistic practices. — Janus
I posit that translation from one language to another cannot be explained other than by reference to the meaning of words that has to be conveyed as faithfully as possible in another language.
So meanings exist. — Olivier5
So the YouTube version: — Banno
Are we done now? Should I bother working on the rest of the article? — Srap Tasmaner
I take Oliver to here be advocating, roughly, first meaning. — Banno
Only if 'meaning' is understood as 'that which language conveys', and so the proposition is tautological. Otherwise what determines members of the class {meanings}? — Isaac
You're still not getting the distinction. — Janus
So is this a great reversal for Davidson? To some extent, yes, but then Davidson's program was always moderated by interpretation. — Banno
Mental events and structures: Anything you can think of, perceive, feel, plan and do, remember, or imagine. And any thought about that thought, and endless combinations thereof. — Olivier5
I don't think simply being a mental event can be sufficient to identity something as a 'meaning'. — Isaac
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