Publication | Closed Access
The Cambridge School and Kripke: Bug Detecting with the History of Political Thought
24
Citations
24
References
2019
Year
Political TheoryPragmatic AnalysisPolitical ProcessPolitical BehaviorRhetoricLexical SemanticsSocial SciencesApplied LinguisticsPolitical ScienceCambridge SchoolDiscourse AnalysisLanguage StudiesTwo-step MethodEarly Cambridge SchoolPolitical ThoughtWicked ProblemPhilosophy Of LanguageLinguisticsTheoretical Linguistics
Abstract We propose a two-step method for studying the history of political thought roughly in line with the contextualism of the Cambridge School. It reframes the early Cambridge School as a bug-detecting program for the outdated conceptual baggage we unknowingly accommodate with our political terminology. Such accommodation often entails propositions that are inconsistent with even our most cherished political opinions. These bugs can cause political arguments to crash. This reframing takes seriously the importance of theories of meaning in the formative methodological arguments of the Cambridge School and updates the argument in light of new developments. We argue the new orthodoxy of Saul Kripke's causal theory of meaning in the philosophy of language better demonstrates the importance of contextual analysis to modern political theory.
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