语义规范性的基础

D. Marconi
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要:语义规范性有两种说法:规定性说和规则性说,前者可以在维特根斯坦的一些评论中找到,后者可能是塞拉斯的观点,现在一些反信息主义者为其辩护。就前者而言,意义是支配词语使用的规范;对于后者,它们是使用的规则,它们本身并不产生任何处方。我认为,只有规定性观点才能解释某些关于意义的陈词滥调,它们激发了语义规范性的概念。在对所谓的语义规范应该采取的形式进行初步澄清之后,为了表面上看起来合理,我反对一些反信息主义者,我认为,无论单词意义中涉及的规范性是什么,都不能被带回与特定语义规范不同的一般真理规范,因为语义规范已经涉及真理规范(或真实性,取决于它们如何措辞)。接下来,我将研究我认为是对语义规范性最强烈的反对,即将意义与使用等同起来:因为使用只是一堆事实,它不能被赋予任何规范性意义。如今,这一观点得到了Paul Horwich的辩护。在批判了霍里奇关于意义虽然本身不是规范性的,但具有直接的规范性含义的主张之后,我提出了一种关于使用和意义之间关系的不同观点,在这种观点上,意义并不完全等同于使用,但(在大多数情况下)是以使用为基础的。我提出了一个过度从众社会系统的模型:在这个系统中,习俗,而且只有习俗,才会产生规范。我认为语言就是这样一个系统,并描述了语言如此运作的两个理由。最后,我在露丝·密立根的“推-拉”表征模型上分析了意义陈述(“w意味着这样那样”),即同时具有描述性和规范性的重要性。然而,我指出,意义以用法为基础也有例外,因为在某些情况下,语义规范是由几种权威规定的。最后,我简要地讨论了意义凌驾于用法的建议,表明除了其固有的困难之外,它并没有解释为什么意义会凌驾于用法。
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Grounds of Semantic Normativity
ABSTRACT:There are two prevalent accounts of semantic normativity: the prescriptive account, which can be found in some of Wittgenstein’s remarks, and the regularity account, which may have been Sellars’s view and is nowadays defended by some antinormativists. On the former account, meanings are norms that govern the use of words; on the latter, they are regularities of use which, in themselves, do not engender any prescriptions. I argue that only the prescriptive view can account for certain platitudes about meaning, which motivate the very idea of semantic normativity. After some preliminary clarifications about the form that alleged semantic norms should take in order to be prima facie plausible, I argue—against some antinormativists—that whatever normativity is involved in the meaning of words cannot be brought back to a general norm of truth as distinct from specifically semantic norms, for semantic norms already involve a norm of truth (or truthfulness, depending on how they are phrased). Next, I examine what I take to be the strongest objection to semantic normativity, namely the identification of meaning with use: as use is just a bunch of facts, it cannot be attributed any normative import. Nowadays, this view has been defended by Paul Horwich. After criticizing Horwich’s claim that meaning, though not normative in itself, has unmediated normative implications, I propose a different view of the relation between use and meaning, on which meaning is not quite identical with use but (in most cases) is grounded on use. I propose as a model the idea of a hyperconformist social system: a system in which customs, and only customs, generate norms. I suggest that language is such a system, and describe two reasons why it is plausible for language to work like that. Finally, I analyze statements of meaning (“w means such-and-such”) on the model of Ruth Millikan “pushmi-pullyu” representations, i.e. as having both descriptive and normative import. I point out that, however, there are exceptions to meaning’s being grounded on use, as there are cases in which semantic norms are dictated by authorities of several kinds. Lastly, I briefly discuss the suggestion that meaning super-venes on use, showing that, aside from its inherent difficulties, it does not explain why meaning would supervene on use.
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