Brandom likes to talk about taking true and making true, belief and action. — igjugarjuk
Just some remarks. Largely unstructured. Allegedly Brandom seeks
"the transcendental conditions of the possibility of determinately contentful conceptual norms"
Which is a lot of qualifiers for a main goal of a piece.
( 1 ) Transcendental. There's statement in the essay which uses it:
In his view, if we are to assert, intelligibly, that we know something, we must take it that the conceptual form things have for thought represents the way they are in themselves. This is a transcendental, indeed semantic, claim about what it means to "know", or be conscious of, something; it is not a direct claim about being itself.
(though this is the author rather than Brandom)
A transcendental claim then seems to be claim about what
must (logically? a-priori?) be true in order for the state of ourselves, our environs etc to be intelligible and
capable of having the properties that they do. It's a structural claim, rather than a functional one.
( 2 ) conditions of possibility. That seems to be the way of fleshing out the relationship of (something... us?) the structural underpinnings of 'determinately contentful conceptual norms' to the determinately contentful conceptual norms themselves. Don't know how the conditions of possibility condition (as a verb) the determinately contentful conceptual norms either - is it (allegedly) an empirical fact that they do or an a-priori one?
( 3 ) determinately contentful. That has an exegesis in paper.
This is the claim that "to be conceptually contentful is to stand in relations of material incompatibility and consequence . . . to other such contentful items" (p. 666) -- relations of what Brandom elsewhere calls "material inference". In saying this, Brandom has in mind empirical concepts, rather than logical ones. The latter are also inferentially related, but empirical concepts stand in relations of material inference, because their empirical contents acquire determinacy through excluding and including other such contents.
Determinately contentful conceptual norms are those conceptual norms which concern empirical rather than logical concepts. Like if I eat a spoiled egg I'll feel crap. What seems to make the norm determinately rather than conceptually contentful is the relationship of events/states of affairs to each other ('material inference') rather than 'logical ones'. I imagine that relations of material inference can only be learned with reference to, or in derivation from, stuff which has been seen and done.
I believe there's an ambiguity in the way I've presented the relationships of material inference referenced in the paper, because it's unclear over whether they are natural successions of events/dynamical flows of environments ('mind independent') or whether they are bodily/mental constructions instantiated in people that represent natural successions of events ("mind dependent"). I also believe that the ambiguity comes from holding the distinction between mind dependent and mind independent on the crucible of mental states - construed as patterns of the psyche. On that there's a quote in the article about where Brandom begins his case for his goal.
Brandom's aim is (among other things) to set out "the transcendental conditions of the possibility of determinately contentful conceptual norms" (p. 532), and the place from which he starts is the "nonpsychological conception of the conceptual"
And in that regard reading those relationships of conceptual inference, whether material or nonmaterial, as psychological events will probably be a misreading.
Instead of mind(internal) and world(external), Brandom seems to use another coordinate system for the space of reasons, the subjective and the objective. Which he has a special sense for.
Brandom's next claim is that conceptual contents take two forms: subjective and objective. Their subjective form articulates what things are for consciousness, or how they appear to us. Their objective form, by contrast, articulates what things are in themselves -- the form of empirical reality or "objective facts". For Brandom, therefore, both reality and thought are "in conceptual shape" -- a view he calls "conceptual realism". Note, however, that Brandom claims no direct access to reality, but he bases his conceptual realism on what is required for knowledge to be intelligible. In his view, if we are to assert, intelligibly, that we know something, we must take it that the conceptual form things have for thought represents the way they are in themselves. This is a transcendental, indeed semantic, claim about what it means to "know", or be conscious of, something; it is not a direct claim about being itself. Note that conceptual realism does not explain how knowing subjects come to distinguish what is real from what is mere appearance (from their perspective). It is simply the thesis that subjective and objective conceptual contents must be understood as "the two poles of the intentional nexus"
Subjective is what things are 'for us' and objective is what things are 'in themselves' - with the clarifying comment that things as they are in themselves are 'the form of empirical reality'. Presumably this is the constellation of material inferences+events which plays a representational role in how we do stuff. I think this is evinced by:
we must take it that the conceptual form things have for thought represents the way they are in themselves.
Another interesting highlight is the Brandom quote that the content of subjective and objective concepts form 'two poles of the intentional nexus' . Will assume this means oppositional poles, like north and south, rather than points of attraction/guidance. I suppose it could also be a 'yes and', since both poles are guiding norms!
My brain has now stopped working. I am now crowdsourcing exegesis on how objective norms are binding.