Gibbard on meaning and normativity |
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Authors: | Timothy Williamson |
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Affiliation: | Faculty of Philosophy, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom |
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Abstract: | The paper is a critique of Allan Gibbard’s impressively crafted monograph Meaning and Normativity. The book relies on a subtle form of logical empiricism, developing a normative verificationist semantics within a subjective Bayesian framework. I argue that the resulting account of synonymy is too fine-grained, since it counts clearly synonymous words in different languages as non-synonymous. For similar reasons, Gibbard’s account of analytic implication relies on postulating untenable connections between semantics and epistemology. I conclude that one of the main obstacles to robust realism about normativity and morality, the supposed conceptual connections between normative language and action, is a myth. |
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Keywords: | Gibbard normativity synonymy analytic verificationism Bayesianism |
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