So what is it you can't say, show or do? — Banno
After Davidson in On the very idea..., any completely incommensurable worldview could not be recognised as a world view. — Banno
If every new use of a word is an original creation, language would be neither usable nor learnable. It would be mere babble, a different word each time.
Rather, as Davidson suggests in derangement of epitaphs, novel use is built on convention. — Banno
We forget there's an ineffable surface to everything, and that we're always on the surface, which ultimately best describes itself. — neonspectraltoast
Would anyone disagree that all things define themselves better than humans ever could? — neonspectraltoast
The difference lies in the fact that one side has nothing to say about what is claimed by the other side. — Joshs
That way we don’t end up talking as though words ‘refer to’ types of use or conventions or are accountable to an independently specifiable rule or norm. — Joshs
Davidson thinks he is dismissing the very notion of a conceptual scheme, when in fact he is only dismissing the Quinean model and its underlying Kantian scheme-content dualism( Davidson’s third dogma of empiricism) , which involves the identification of conceptual schemes with sentential languages and the thesis of redistribution of truth-values across different conceptual schemes. Two schemes/languages differ when some substantial sentences of one language are not held to be true in the other in a systematic manner.
Conceptual relativism does not involve “confrontations between two conceptual schemes with different distributions of truth-values over their assertions, but rather confrontations between two languages with different distributions of truth-value status over their sentences due to incompatible metaphysical presuppositions. They do not lie in the sphere of disagreement or conflict of the sort arising when one theory holds something to be true that the other holds to be false. The difference lies in the fact that one side has nothing to say about what is claimed by the other side. It is not that they say the same thing differently, but rather that they say totally different things. The key contrast here is between saying something (asserting or denying) and saying nothing.”(On Davidson’s Refutation of Conceptual Schemes and Conceptual Relativism) — Joshs
I think having the discussion about the pre-predicative I highlighted, in an exploratory fashion, would. — fdrake
I'm not sure where to go with that.Interesting point about conflict/mismatch as a commensuration relation. — fdrake
There are certainly issues here. On the one side I've got Davidson's argument in On the Very Idea... and on the other Midgley's not so well articulated distinction between intentional conversations and extensional conversations... not between intensional and extensional; I borrow willy-nilly from both, throwing in a bit of Searle's social intentionality an Davidson's animalism of the mental, and while it all takes on a sort of sense, It's certainly not tight. — Banno
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