Wednesday, May 29, 2019
How Private Must an Objectionably Private Language Be? :: Philosophy Philosophical Papers
How Private Must an Objectionably Private Language Be?ABSTRACT whatsoever philosophers, taking their cue from Philosophical Investigations (PI) 243-315, suppose that a clandestine language is objectionable only when its terms refer to Cartesian mental events. Others (notably Kripke) break rivet on PI 201 and the surrounding remarks about rule following, and have explicated the notion of an objectionable private language as (roughly) that of a language apply by just one isolated individual unsupported at any time by any source of external or connection subject field and approval. I attempt to defend Kripkes account against some objections proffered by Simon Blackburn. Blackburn supposes that individuals are no worse off than communities with respect to the difficulties raised by Kripke, and argues that the paradox of PI 201 can be avoided by a proper understanding of extended dispositions, and by grasping the possibility of private practices. But Blackburn misconstrues what it is to go on in the same way in following a rule, and ignores the place of constitutive rules in practices.Some philosophers, taking their cue from Philosophical Investigations (PI) 243 - 315, suppose that a private language is objectionable only when its terms refer to Cartesian mental events. In this strong sense private languages are very private indeed. Others (notably Kripke, 1982) have focused on PI 201 and the surrounding remarks about rule following, and have explicated the notion of an objectionably private language as (roughly) that of a language used by just one isolated individual unsupported at any time by any source of external or community correction and approval. I think of this as a weaker sense of private language.In sec. 1 I attempt to defend the Kripke - Wittgenstein (henceforth KW) version of the private language rail line against some objections proffered by Simon Blackburn. KW takes languages which are private in the weaker sense to be objectionable, and clai ms that the later discussion (PI 243 - 315) deals with a special case falling under the more general discussion of rule following in earlier sections. In section II I briefly consider some workable objections from Wittgenstein himself to my defense of Kripke.IThis was our paradox no course of action could be determined by a rule, because every course of action can be made out to accord with the rule(PI 201). According to KW the reason any course of action could accord with the rule is that there is no concomitant about an individual to which he can point in justifying going on one way (in the application of a word, continuation of a modus operandi series, etc.
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