How to Understand Language
A Philosophical Inquiry
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Author(s): Bernhard Weiss  
ISBN: 1844651975
ISBN-13: 9781844651979
Publication Date: 31/12/2009
Pages: 288 (234 x 156mm)
Format: Paperback
Published Price: £16.99
Discount Price: £13.59
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DESCRIPTION:

Why are philosophers – as opposed to, say, linguists and psychologists – puzzled by language? How should we attempt to shed philosophical light on the phenomenon of language? How to Understand Language frames its discussion of the philosophy of language with these two central questions. Bernhard Weiss first explores the reasons why language is so hard to understand from a philosophical point of view and then begins the search for a productive approach to the philosophical task of understanding language. After finding fault with approaches based on philosophical analysis or translation, Weiss undertakes an extended investigation of the programme of constructing a theory of meaning. Weiss endorses Donald Davidson’s advocacy of that approach, which is pivotal to the discussion, but he argues strongly against the roles of both truth theory and radical interpretation. In doing so, he offers novel arguments for a number of distinctive claims about some key issues in philosophy of language, centrally, those of the normativity and publicity of meaning. How to Understand Language presents a fresh approach to many issues of abiding interest in the philosophy of language.

AUTHOR BIO:
Bernhard Weiss is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Cape Town, South Africa. His books include Michael Dummett (Acumen, 2002).

CONTENTS:
Preface
1. The Puzzles of Language
2. The Starting Point for Analysis
3. Analysing Sentence Meaning
4. Analysing Synonymy
5. Radical Translation
6. The Structure of a Theory of Meaning
7. Radical Interpretation
8. Linguistic Norms, Communication and Radical Interpretation 
9. Linguistic Normativity 
10. Radical or Robust? 
11. Language and Community
12. Rules and Privacy: The Problem
13. Rules and Privacy: The Solution?
14. Truth-conditions vs Use-conditions 
Notes
Bibliography
Index


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