Speranza
It perhaps wasn't clear that when I chose to title a recent post of mine, "Grice as intentionalist" I was echoing a brilliant passage by Suppes!
I was recently re-reading Suppes's contribution to the Griceian festschrift, P. G. R. I. C. E., "philosophical grounds of rationality: intentions, categories, ends".
Suppes focuses on a few points:
Paul Yu's point on Grice's relying on 'literal meaning' -- Yu is wrong.
John Biro's point about Grice being circular in his reasoning -- But Biro is wrong. Apparently Biro held some private correspondence with Suppes on that point, and they agreed to disagree!
Chomsky's exegesis of Grice as a behaviourist. Suppes relies on Chomsky's "John Locke Lectures" at Oxford, -- "Reflections on language" -- where Chomsky quotes profusely from the reprint of one of Grice's William James lectures in Searle, "Philosophy of Language" (Oxford readings in Philosophy, ed. by G. J. Warnock).
Suppes writes:
"It seems to me that Chomsky is badly off the mark"
The implicature of 'it seems to me' can here very appropriately be cancelled:
Chomsky IS badly off the mark -- never mind what it seems to Suppes!
Suppes goes on:
Chomsky is widely off the mark "in the passages" on Grice in "Reflections on language" on Grice being a behaviourist."
Suppes goes on:
"In terms of more reasoned and dispassionate analyses, it seems to me that one would ordinarily think of Grice not as a behaviourist" -- as Ryle was -- "but as an intentionalist" -- as the good ole phenomenologists.
I love the term 'intentionalist', and I think of Martin Anton Maurus Marty.
Martin Anton Maurus Marty (18 October 1847, in Schwyz – 1 October 1914, in Prague) was a Swiss philosopher. He specialized in philosophy of language, psychology and ontology. He was considered the successor of Franz Brentano.
More of his links with Grice later.
Friday, February 6, 2015
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment