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Rule-Following, Meaning, and Primitive Normativity
31
Citations
15
References
2017
Year
Primitive NormativityNormative AnalysisPhilosophy Of LanguageContextualismNormative IssuePragmatic AnalysisHannah GinsborgWittgenstein ’Philosophical InquiryPragmaticsRhetorical TheoryLanguage StudiesPrimitive Normative AttitudeNormative TheoryRegulation
Abstract This paper explores the prospects for using the notion of a primitive normative attitude in responding to the sceptical argument about meaning developed in chapter 2 of Saul Kripke’s Wittgenstein on Rules and Private Language. It takes as its stalking-horse the response to Kripke’s Wittgenstein developed in a recent series of important works by Hannah Ginsborg. The paper concludes that Ginsborg’s attempted solution fails for a number of reasons: it depends on an inadequate response to Kripke’s Wittgenstein’s ‘finitude’ objection to reductive dispositionalism; it erroneously rejects the idea that a speaker’s understanding of an expression guides her use; it threatens to collapse into either full-blown non-reductionism or reductive dispositionalism; and there is no motive for accepting it over forms of non-reductionism such as those developed by Barry Stroud and John McDowell.
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