Sunday, July 15, 2007
Noam Chomsky, "Language and Interpretation"
Chomsky criticizes central philosophical accounts of what constraints should apply to the study of language: Quine's behaviorism, Davidson's demand that we explain communication, and Dummett's claims about public language. None of these notions are compatible with the actual scientific investigation of language.
Labels:
behaviorism,
Chomsky,
communication,
Davidson,
Dummett,
interpretation,
public language,
Quine,
science
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