Acceso abierto

The Indeterminacy of Translation: Fifty Years Later

  
31 dic 2018

Cite
Descargar portada

The paper considers the Quinean heritage of the argument for the indeterminacy of translation. Beyond analyzing Quine’s notion of stimulus meaning, the paper discusses two Kripkean argument’s against the Quinean claim that dispositions can provide the basis for an account of meaning: the Normativity Argument and the Finiteness Argument. An analogy between Kripke’s arguments and Hume’s argument for epistemological skepticism about the external world will be drawn. The paper shows that the answer to Kripke’s rule-following skepticism is analogous to the answer to Humean skepticism: our use of concepts is more basic than, and presupposed by, the statement of the skeptical problem itself.

Idiomas:
Inglés, Portuguese
Calendario de la edición:
4 veces al año
Temas de la revista:
Filosofía, Movimientos filosóficos seleccionados, Filosofía analítica