philosophy of language. course instructor office: hsh (ho sin hang) 213

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Philosophy of Language

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Page 1: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Philosophy of Language

Page 2: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Course Instructor

Page 3: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Page 4: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Office Hours

Wednesday 4:00PM-6:00PM & by appointment

Page 6: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Course Website

michaeljohnsonphilosophy.com

Page 7: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Course Meeting Times

Wednesdays: 9:30AM-11:00AM LKK205

Fridays: 1:30PM-3:00PM LKK203

Page 8: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Reading

All the readings will be posted on Moodle, for copyright reasons.

Page 9: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Assessment

The course grade will be based on three short papers that I assign during the term.

• Short Paper #1: 3-5pp (25%)• Short Paper #2: 4-6pp (35%)• Short Paper #3: 5-7pp (40%)

Page 10: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

How to Write a Philosophy Paper

There are some helpful resources on the course website, but I will also talk about this in-class.

Page 11: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Attendance and Participation

Attendance and participation in class are both required. You won’t lose any points if you don’t come to class and don’t participate, but you will learn a lot less, and will probably score lower on the assignments. If there is something you do not understand, please stop and ask me. I like questions, and I am happy to try to answer them.

Page 12: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Academic Dishonesty

Students shall be aware of the University regulations about dishonest practice in course work and the possible consequences as stipulated in the Regulations Governing University Examinations.

Page 13: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

5.2a Collusion

A student misrepresents a piece of unauthorised group work as his/her own work.

Page 14: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

5.2b Falsification of Data

The presentation of data in reports, projects or research papers, which is purported to be based on experimental or research work conducted by the student, has actually been invented by the student, copied or obtained by unfair means.

Page 15: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

5.2c Plagiarism

The presentation of another person's work without proper acknowledgement of the source, whether protected by copyright or not, as the student's own work.

Page 16: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

5.2d Anything Else Dishonest

For example, submission of same or substantially same work for two assignments without prior approval.

Page 17: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Policy on Cheating

I have zero tolerance for cheating.

When in doubt, ask me!

Page 18: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Policy on Talking in Class (When You’re Not Contributing)

Zero tolerance.

Page 19: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

What is the Philosophy of Language?

Page 20: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Philosophy of language is the study of philosophically interesting issues concerning language.

Many of these issue involve the semantic (or “meaning”) properties of language.

Page 21: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Semantic Properties

• The French sentence ‘il pleut’ means that it’s raining.

• That sentence is true if and only if it’s raining.• The French word ‘chien’ applies to dogs; dogs

satisfy ‘chien.’• The name ‘Victor Hugo’ refers to a certain

person; sentences containing the name are about Victor Hugo.

Page 22: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Interesting Features

Semantic properties/ relations are interesting for a number of reasons. Normally, we see the following patterns:• If Fred kicked George, then George exists.• If Fred kicked George, then there is someone

Fred kicked.• If Fred kicked George, and George is the

sneakiest Russian spy, then Fred kicked the sneakiest Russian spy.

Page 23: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Interesting Features

However,• ‘Sherlock Holmes’ means Sherlock Holmes, but

Holmes does not exist.• ‘Santa Claus’ means Santa Claus, but there isn’t

anyone whom ‘Santa Claus’ means.• ‘Ben Franklin’ means Ben Franklin, and Ben

Franklin is the inventor of bifocals, but ‘Ben Franklin’ does not mean the inventor of bifocals.

Page 24: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Interesting Features

Language can mean or be about thing that don’t exist.

Also, even when they are about things that do exist (Ben Franklin), they simultaneously are not about those very same things (the inventor of bifocals).

That’s all very weird.

Page 25: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Naturalizing Meaning

The weirdness of representation makes it difficult to see how it fits into “the natural order.”

As we’ll see, various proposals about why some things have meanings and others don’t, and why things that have meanings have the ones they do, haven’t worked out to everyone’s satisfaction.

Page 26: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Original vs. Derived Meaning

One strategy for dealing with the problem of linguistic representation is to say that words represent what our thoughts represent (since thoughts too can be about things and be true or false).

This pushes the problem back to how thoughts can represent, but maybe this is easier to explain.

Page 27: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

The Idea Theory

One theory popular in the Early Modern period in Europe was the idea theory. According to this theory, words stood for ideas and ideas represented things. Derivatively, words represented what the ideas they stood for represented.

Ideas were like mental pictures, and they represented the world by resembling it. (Obviously can’t work for words: ‘dog’ doesn’t resemble dogs.)

Page 28: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

The Idea Theory

Mind Idea of a Dagger

Dagger

Resembles

Sees

Page 29: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Problems for the Idea Theory

For a large number of reasons (that we’ll cover in detail next class), the idea theory went out of fashion.

Here’s just one such reason: if A resembles B, then B resembles A. But it’s not true that if A represents B, then B represents A. Therefore representation is not resemblance.

Page 30: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Verificationism

A subsequent view that became popular in early 20th Century Anglophone philosophy was called ‘verificationism.’

Roughly stated, the verificationist position was that words stood for experiences, and experiences represented what they verified. Here, an experience verifies X = whenever you have that experience, X is true.

Page 31: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Verificationism

So the meaning of ‘it’s raining’ would be the set of experiences such that if you were having those experiences, then it was raining.

We’ll consider verificationism in greater detail, but one objection worth thinking about is that it seems to count past-tense sentences as meaningless. What experiences that you now have can verify “Caesar crossed the Rubicon”?

Page 32: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

The Description Theory

Verificationism was a kind of description or definition theory. Some words stood for certain experiences, but other words were defined from the ones that stood for experiences.

This is another common strategy in lessening the amount of work we have to do to understand meaning. Some words “inherit” their meanings from others via definitions.

Page 33: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

The Description Theory

But the definition strategy is broader than verificationism. You can deny that words stand for experiences and still say that some (perhaps a great many) words get their meanings by definition. And maybe all of them do?

Part of the problem with the description theory has been that there are so few convincing definitions.

Page 34: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

The Causal-Historical Theory

The causal-historical theory is the view that my words don’t have their meanings because of the ideas/ experiences/ definitions that I associate with them, but rather they simply “inherit” their meanings from the people whom I learnt the words from. Mental representation is required for the original “attachment” of meaning (reference fixing) but not its preservation.

Page 35: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

The Causal-Historical Theory

Let’s call that thing a “tiger.”

TIGERTIGERTIGERTIGER

Page 36: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Meaning Change & Madagascar

One problem for the causal-historical theory is that sometimes words change their meanings .

(That is, they don’t inherit them from prior uses of those words.)

Page 37: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

The Use Theory

Some words are very difficult to handle on the theories of meaning we’ve discussed– words like ‘not’ and ‘and.’

What mental picture does ‘and’ stand for? What experience? Can you define ‘and’ with other words? These questions are difficult, or impossible to answer.

Page 38: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

The Use Theory

One view is that ‘and’ means what it does because of how it’s used in inference.

From ‘A and B’ we can infer A and we can infer B. We can’t infer A from ‘A or B.’

From A and B, we can infer ‘A and B.’ We can’t infer ‘A and B’ from just A, however (cf. ‘A or B’).

Page 39: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

The Use Theory

The difficulty is to make this idea work for other expressions. Use theorists have certainly tried, but it’s difficult to explain, for example, what premises you can infer ‘x is a tree’ from, and what conclusions you can draw from ‘x is a tree.’ It seems saying this would require you to have a definition of tree (which, as I’ve said, is difficult to come by).

Page 40: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Infinite Meanings

Moving beyond theories of meaning, there are other issues in the philosophy of language.

One interesting one is how it’s possible that we can understand a potential infinity of novel utterances– sentences we’ve never heard before in our life.

Page 41: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Novelty

Before now you’ve never heard the sentence,

“Little purple gnomes, wearing red tracksuits, are disco-dancing on the ceiling of the Dorothy Wong building.”

Still, you understand what it means without effort.

Page 42: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Infinity

And there are infinitely many meaningful sentences that you have yet to hear, but would understand immediately. Here’s the proof.

For any meaningful sentence that’s N words long, there is another meaningful sentence that’s N + 3 words long: take the original and append ‘Michael believes that’ to the front.

Page 43: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213
Page 44: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Compositionality

A much-favored solution among philosophers (and linguists and computer scientists) is called compositionality.

This is the claim that we can understand infinitely many sentences, because the meanings of sentences depend only on what their parts mean, and there are only finitely many parts (individual words).

Page 45: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Semantic Paradoxes

There are a number of paradoxes associated with semantic properties. We’ll be looking at them later in the semester, but here is one known as Grelling’s paradox.

First, we define the terms autological and heterological.

Page 46: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Autological Adjectives

An adjective is autological if and only if it applies to itself. Examples:

• ‘Short’ is short• ‘English’ is English• ‘Adjectival’ is adjectival• ‘Polysyllabic’ is polysyllabic

Page 47: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Heterological Adjectives

The heterological adjectives are all the rest, the ones that don’t apply to themselves:

• ‘Long’ is not long• ‘German’ is not German• ‘Nominal’ is not nominal• ‘Monosyllabic’ is not monosyllabic

Page 48: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Grelling’s Paradox

Is the adjective ‘heterological’ heterological?

Page 49: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Yes?

1. Assume: ‘heterological’ is heterological. 2. By definition, an adjective is heterological if it

does not apply to itself.3. By definition then, ‘heterological’ does not

apply to itself. 4. Thus ‘heterological’ is not heterological.

(1) And (4) contradict each other!

Page 50: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Grelling’s Paradox

1. Assume: ‘heterological’ is not heterological. 2. Then it does not apply to itself.3. So by definition, ‘heterological’ is

heterological.

Another contradiction!

Page 51: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

Paradoxes of Vagueness

Paradoxes also seem to arise when we consider vague expressions– expressions that have borderline cases.

Many adjectives are vague– ‘bald,’ and ‘rich.’ are examples. Sometimes it’s not clear whether someone is bald or whether they’re rich. There are also non-vague adjectives, like ‘pregnant.’

Page 52: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

No Sharp Boundaries

For vague terms, it seems there are no sharp boundaries. This means something like: if someone is bald, adding one hair to their head won’t make them not bald, and if they are not bald, taking one hair away won’t make them bald.

Page 53: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

The Slippery Slope

But now consider this argument:1. Someone with 1 hair is bald.2. So someone with 2 hairs is bald [No Sharp

Boundaries]3. So someone with 3 hairs is bald [No Sharp

Boundaries]… So someone with 10 million hairs is not bald.

Page 54: Philosophy of Language. Course Instructor Office: HSH (Ho Sin Hang) 213

What do we do? We can’t believe that someone with 1 hair is bald AND that someone with 10 million hairs is not bald AND that there are no sharp boundaries.

But all three claims seems unimpeachable. If we reject No Sharp Boundaries, for instance, we have to say that its possible to go from bald to not bald by losing one hair!