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Friday, March 15, 2013

Grice's Unmarried Man (Is: Bachelor)

Speranza

Passage by Quine discussed by Grice:

Quine:

"There is also a second class of analytic statements."
 
"This class is typified by utterances such as:

"No bachelor is married".


The characteristic of such a statement is that it can be turned into a logical truth by putting synonyms for synonyms.
 
Thus,
 
"No bachelor is married"
 
can be turned into
 
[a more primitive class of analytic statements, viz: "No unmarried man is married"] by putting 'unmarried man' for its alleged synonym 'bachelor.'
 
"We still lack a proper characterization of this second class of analytic statements, and therewith of analyticity generally, inasmuch as we have had in the above description to lean on a notion of 'synonymy' which is no less in need of clarification than analyticity itself."
 
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