paradigm-case
argument: the issue of analyticity is, as Locke puts it, the issue of whats
trifle. That a triangle is trilateral Locke considers a trifling proposition,
like Saffron is yellow. Lewes (who calls mathematical propositions analytic)
describes the Kantian problem. The reductive analysis of meaning Grice offers
depends on the analytic. Few Oxonian philosophers would follow Loar, D. Phil
Oxon, under Warnock, in thinking of Grices conversational maxims as empirical
inductive generalisations over functional states! Synthesis may do in the New
World,but hardly in the Old! The locus classicus for the ordinary-language
philosophical response to Quine in Two dogmas of empiricism. Grice and Strawson
claim that is analytic does have an ordinary-language use, as attached two a
type of behavioural conversational response. To an analytically false move
(such as My neighbours three-year-old son is an adult) the addressee A is bound
to utter, I dont understand you! You are not being figurative, are you? To a
synthetically false move, on the other hand (such as My neighbours
three-year-old understands Russells Theory of Types), the addressee A
will jump with, Cant believe it! The topdogma of analyticity is for Grice
very important to defend. Philosophy depends on it! He knows that to
many his claim to fame is his In defence of a dogma, the topdogma of
analyticity, no less. He eventually turns to a pragmatist justification of
the distinction. This pragmatist justification is still in accordance with
what he sees as the use of analytic in ordinary language. His infamous examples
are as follows. My neighbours three-year old understands Russells Theory of
Types. A: Hard to believe, but I will. My neighbours three-year old is an adult. Metaphorically?
No. Then I dont understand you, and what youve just said is, in my scheme
of things, analytically false. Ultimately, there are conversational criteria,
based on this or that principle of conversational helfpulness. Grice is also
circumstantially concerned with the synthetic a priori, and he would ask his
childrens playmates: Can a sweater be red and green all over? No stripes
allowed! The distinction is ultimately Kantian, but it had brought to the
fore by the linguistic turn, Oxonian and other! In defence of a
dogma, Two dogmas of empiricism, : the analytic-synthetic
distinction. For Quine, there are two. Grice is mainly interested in the
first one: that there is a distinction between the analytic and the synthetic.
Grice considers Empiricism as a monster on his way to the Rationalist City of
Eternal Truth. Grice came back time and again to explore the
analytic-synthetic distinction. But his philosophy remained constant. His
sympathy is for the practicality of it, its rationale. He sees it as involving
formal calculi, rather than his own theory of conversation as rational
co-operation which does not presuppose the analytic-synthetic distinction, even
if it explains it! Grice would press the issue here: if one wants to prove that
such a theory of conversation as rational co-operation has to be seen as
philosophical, rather than some other way, some idea of analyticity may be
needed to justify the philosophical enterprise. Cf. the synthetic a priori,
that fascinated Grice most than anything Kantian else! Can a sweater be green
and red all over? No stripes allowed. With In defence of a dogma, Grice and
Strawson attack a New-World philosopher. Grice had previously collaborated with
Strawson in an essay on Met. (actually a
three-part piece, with Pears as the third author). The example Grice chooses to
refute attack by Quine of the top-dogma is the Aristotelian idea of the
peritrope, as Aristotle refutes Antiphasis in Met. (v. Ackrill, Burnyeat and Dancy). Grice
explores chapter Γ 8 of Aristotles Met. . In Γ 8, Aristotle
presents two self-refutation arguments against two theses, and calls the
asserter, Antiphasis, T1 = Everything is true, and T2 = Everything is false,
Metaph. Γ 8, 1012b13–18. Each thesis is exposed to the stock objection
that it eliminates itself. An utterer who explicitly conveys that everything is
true also makes the thesis opposite to his own true, so that his own is not
true (for the opposite thesis denies that his is true), and any utterer U who
explicitly conveys that everything is false also belies
himself. Aristotle does not seem to be claiming that, if everything
is true, it would also be true that it is false that everything is true and,
that, therefore, Everything is true must be false: the final, crucial
inference, from the premise if, p, ~p to the conclusion ~p is
missing. But it is this extra inference that seems required to have a
formal refutation of Antiphasiss T1 or T2 by consequentia mirabilis. The
nature of the argument as a purely dialectical silencer of Antiphasis is
confirmed by the case of T2, Everything is false. An utterer who explicitly
conveys that everything is false unwittingly concedes, by self-application,
that what he is saying must be false too. Again, the further and different
conclusion Therefore; it is false that everything is false is
missing. That proposal is thus self-defeating, self-contradictory (and
comparable to Grices addressee using adult to apply to three-year old, without
producing the creature), oxymoronic, and suicidal. This seems all that
Aristotle is interested in establishing through the self-refutation stock objection. This
is not to suggest that Aristotle did not believe that Everything is true or
Everything is false is false, or that he excludes that he can prove its
falsehood. Grice notes that this is not what Aristotle seems to be
purporting to establish in 1012b13–18. This holds for a περιτροπή (peritrope)
argument, but not for a περιγραφή (perigraphe) argument (συμβαίνει δὴ καὶ τὸ
θρυλούμενον πᾶσι τοῖς τοιούτοις λόγοις, αὐτοὺς ἑαυτοὺς ἀναιρεῖν. ὁ μὲν γὰρ
πάντα ἀληθῆ λέγων καὶ τὸν ἐναντίον αὑτοῦ λόγον ἀληθῆ ποιεῖ, ὥστε τὸν ἑαυτοῦ οὐκ
ἀληθῆ (ὁ γὰρ ἐναντίος οὔ φησιν αὐτὸν ἀληθῆ), ὁ δὲ πάντα ψευδῆ καὶ αὐτὸς
αὑτόν.) It may be emphasized that Aristotles argument does not contain an
explicit application of consequentia mirabilis. Indeed, no extant self-refutation
argument before Augustine, Grice is told by Mates, contains an explicit
application of consequentia mirabilis. This observation is a good and important
one, but Grice has doubts about the consequences one may draw from it. One
may take the absence of an explicit application of consequentia mirabilis to be
a sign of the purely dialectical nature of the self-refutation
argument. This is questionable. The formulation of a self-refutation
argument (as in Grices addressee, Sorry, I misused adult.) is often compressed
and elliptical and involves this or that implicatum. One usually assumes
that this or that piece in a dialectical context has been omitted and should be
supplied (or worked out, as Grice prefers) by the addressee. But in this
or that case, it is equally possible to supply some other, non-dialectical
piece of reasoning. In Aristotles arguments from Γ 8, e.g., the addressee
may supply an inference to the effect that the thesis which has been shown to
be self-refuting is not true. For if Aristotle takes the argument to
establish that the thesis has its own contradictory version as a consequence,
it must be obvious to Aristotle that the thesis is not true (since every
consequence of a true thesis is true, and two contradictory theses cannot be
simultaneously true). On the further assumption (that Grice makes
explicit) that the principle of bivalence is applicable, Aristotle may even
infer that the thesis is false. It is perfectly plausible to attribute
such an inference to Aristotle and to supply it in his argument from Γ
8. On this account, there is no reason to think that the argument is of an
intrinsically dialectical nature and cannot be adequately represented as a
non-dialectical proof of the non-truth, or even falsity, of the thesis in
question. It is indeed difficult to see signs of a dialectical exchange
between two parties (of the type of which Grice and Strawson are champions) in
Γ8, 1012b13–18. One piece of evidence is Aristotles reference to the
person, the utterer, as Grice prefers who explicitly conveys or asserts (ὁ
λέγων) that T1 or that T2. This reference by the Grecian philosopher to
the Griceian utterer or asserter of the thesis that everything is true would be
irrelevant if Aristotles aim is to prove something about T1s or T2s propositional
content, independently of the act by the utterer of uttering its
expression and thereby explicitly conveying it. However, it is not clear
that this reference is essential to Aristotles argument. One may even
doubt whether the Grecian philosopher is being that Griceian, and actually
referring to the asserter of T1 or T2. The *implicit* (or implicated)
grammatical Subjects of Aristotles ὁ λέγων (1012b15) might be λόγος, instead of
the utterer qua asserter. λόγος is surely the implicit grammatical Subjects of
ὁ λέγων shortly after ( 1012b21–22. 8). The passage may be taken to be
concerned with λόγοι ‒ this or that statement, this or that
thesis ‒ but not with its asserter. In the Prior Analytics,
Aristotle states that no thesis (A three-year old is an adult) can necessarily
imply its own contradictory (A three-year old is not an adult) (2.4,
57b13–14). One may appeal to this statement in order to argue for
Aristotles claim that a self-refutation argument should NOT be analyzed as
involving an implicit application of consequentia mirabilis. Thus, one should
deny that Aristotles self-refutation argument establishes a necessary
implication from the self-refuting thesis to its contradictory. However,
this does not explain what other kind of consequence relation Aristotle takes
the self-refutation argument to establish between the self-refuting thesis and
its contradictory, although dialectical necessity has been suggested.
Aristotles argument suffices to establish that Everything is false is either
false or liar-paradoxical. If a thesis is liar-paradoxical (and Grice
loved, and overused the expression), the assumption of its falsity leads to
contradiction as well as the assumption of its truth. But Everything is
false is only liar-paradoxical in the unlikely, for Aristotle perhaps
impossible, event that everything distinct from this thesis is false. So,
given the additional premise that there is at least one true item distinct from
the thesis Everything is false, Aristotle can safely infer that the thesis is false.
As for Aristotles ὁ γὰρ λέγων τὸν ἀληθῆ λόγον ἀληθῆ ἀληθής,, or eliding
the γὰρ, ὁ λέγων τὸν ἀληθῆ λόγον ἀληθῆ ἀληθής, (ho
legon ton alethe logon alethe alethes) may be rendered as either: The statement
which states that the true statement is true is true, or, more alla Grice,
as He who says (or explicitly conveys, or indicates) that the true thesis
is true says something true. It may be argued that it is quite baffling
(and figurative or analogical or metaphoric) in this context, to take ἀληθής to
be predicated of the Griceian utterer, a person (true standing for truth
teller, trustworthy), to take it to mean that he says something true,
rather than his statement stating something true, or his statement being true.
But cf. L and S: ἀληθής [α^], Dor. ἀλαθής, [α^], Dor. ἀλαθής, ές, f. λήθω, of
persons, truthful, honest (not in Hom., v. infr.), ἀ. νόος Pi. O.2.92;
κατήγορος A. Th. 439; κριτής Th. 3.56; οἶνος ἀ. `in vino veritas, Pl. Smp.
217e; ὁ μέσος ἀ. τις Arist. EN 1108a20. Admittedly, this or that non-Griceian
passage in which it is λόγος, and not the utterer, which is the implied
grammatical Subjects of ὁ λέγων can be found in Metaph. Γ7, 1012a24–25; Δ6,
1016a33; Int. 14, 23a28–29; De motu an. 10, 703a4; Eth. Nic. 2.6, 1107a6–7.
9. So the topic is controversial. Indeed such a non-Griceian exegesis of
the passage is given by Alexander of Aphrodisias (in Metaph. 340. 26–29):9,
when Alexander observes that the statement, i.e. not the utterer, that says
that everything is false (ὁ δὲ πάντα ψευδῆ εἶναι λέγων λόγος) negates itself,
not himself, because if everything is false, this very statement, which, rather
than, by which the utterer, says that everything is false, would be false, and
how can an utterer be FALSE? So that the statement which, rather than the utterer
who, negates it, saying that not everything is false, would be true, and surely
an utterer cannot be true. Does Alexander misrepresent Aristotles argument by
omitting every Griceian reference to the asserter or utterer qua rational
personal agent, of the thesis? If the answer is negative, even if the
occurrence of ὁ λέγων at 1012b15 refers to the asserter, or utterer, qua
rational personal agent, this is merely an accidental feature of Aristotles
argument that cannot be regarded as an indication of its dialectical nature.
None of this is to deny that some self-refutation argument may be of an
intrinsically dialectical nature; it is only to deny that every one is This is
in line with Burnyeats view that a dialectical self-refutation, even if
qualified, as Aristotle does, as ancient, is a subspecies of self-refutation,
but does not exhaust it. Granted, a dialectical approach may provide a useful
interpretive framework for many an ancient self-refutation argument. A
statement like If proof does not exist, proof exists ‒ that occurs in an
anti-sceptical self-refutation argument reported by Sextus
Empiricus ‒ may receive an attractive dialectical re-interpretation.
It may be argued that such a statement should not be understood at the
level of what is explicated, but should be regarded as an elliptical reminder
of a complex dialectical argument which can be described as follows. Cf. If
thou claimest that proof doth not exist, thou must present a proof of what thou
assertest, in order to be credible, but thus thou thyself admitest that proof
existeth. A similar point can be made for Aristotles famous argument in the
Protrepticus that one must philosophise. A number of sources state that this
argument relies on the implicature, If one must not philosophize, one must
philosophize. It may be argued that this implicature is an elliptical reminder
of a dialectical argument such as the following. If thy position is that thou
must not philosophise, thou must reflect on this choice and argue in its
support, but by doing so thou art already choosing to do philosophy, thereby
admitting that thou must philosophise. The claim that every instance of an
ancient self-refutation arguments is of an intrinsically dialectical nature is
thus questionable, to put it mildly. V also 340.19–26, and A. Madigan, tcomm.,
Alexander of Aphrodisias: On Aristotles Met.
4, Ithaca, N.Y., Burnyeat, Protagoras and Self-Refutation in Later Greek
Philosophy,. Grices implicature is that Quine should have learned Greek before
refuting Aristotle. But then *I* dont speak Greek! Strawson refuted. Refs.: The
obvious keyword is ‘analytic,’ in The H. P. Grice Papers, BANC.
philosophical:
Grice was somewhat obsessed as to what ‘philosohical’ stood for, which amused
the members of his play group! His play group once spends five weeks in an
effort to explain why, sometimes, ‘very’ allows, with little or no change of
meaning, the substitution of ‘highly’ (as in ‘very unusual’) and sometimes does
not (as in ‘very depressed’ or ‘very wicked’); and we reached no conclusion. This
episode was ridiculed by some as an ultimate embodiment of fruitless frivolity.
But that response is as out of place as a similar response to the medieval
question, ‘How many angels can dance on a needle’s point?’” A needless point?For
much as this medieval question is raised in order to display, in a vivid way, a
difficulty in the conception of an immaterial substance, so The Play Group
discussion is directed, in response to a worry from me, towards an examination,
in the first instance, of a conceptual question which is generally agreed among
us to be a strong candidate for being a question which had no philosophical
importance, with a view to using the results of this examination in finding a
distinction between philosophically important and philosophically unimportant
enquiries. Grice is fortunate that the Lit. Hum. programme does not have much
philosophy! He feels free! In fact, the lack of a philosophical background is
felt as a badge of honour. It is ‘too clever’ and un-English to ‘know’ things.
A pint of philosophy is all Grice wanted. Figurative. This is Harvardite Gordon’s
attempt to formulate a philosophy of the minimum fundamental ideas that all
people on the earth should come to know. Reviewed by A. M. Honoré: Short
measure. Gordon, a Stanley Plummer scholar, e: Bowdoin and Harvard, in The
Eastern Gazette. Grice would exclaim: I always loved Alfred Brooks Gordon!
Grice was slightly disapppointed that Gordon had not included the fundamental
idea of implicature in his pint. Short measure, indeed. Refs.: The main sources
in the Grice Papers are under series III, of the doctrines. See also references
under ‘lingusitic botany,’ and Oxonianism. Grice liked to play with the adage
of ‘philosophia’ as ‘regina scientiarum.’ A specific essay in his update of
“post-war Oxford philosophy,” in WoW on “Conceptual analysis and the province of
philosophy,” BANC.
physiological.
Grice would use ‘natural,’ relying on the idea that it’s Grecian ‘physis.’ Liddell and Scott
have “φύσις,” from “φύω,” and which they render as “origin.” the natural form
or constitution of a person or thing as the result of growth, and hence nature,
constitution, and nature as an originating power, “φ. λέγεται . . ὅθεν ἡ
κίνησις ἡ πρώτη ἐν ἑκάστῳ τῶν φύσει ὄντων” Arist.Metaph.1014b16; concrete, the
creation, 'Nature.’ Grice is casual in his use of ‘natural’ versus
‘non-natural’ in 1948 for the Oxford Philosophical Society. In later works,
there’s a reference to naturalism, which is more serious. Refs.: The keyword
should be ‘naturalism,’ but also Grice’s diatribes against ‘physicalism,’ and
of course the ‘natural’ and ‘non-natural,’ BANC.
practical
reason: Literally, ‘practical reason’ is the buletic part of the soul (psyche)
that deals with praxis, where the weighing is central. We dont need means-end
rationality, we need value-oriented rationality. We dont need the rationality
of the means – this is obvious --. We want the rationality of the ends. The end
may justify the means. But Grice is looking for what justifies the end. The
topic of freedom fascinated Grice, because it merged the practical with the
theoretical. Grice sees the conception of freedom as crucial in his
elucidation of a rational being. Conditions of freedom are necessary for the
very idea, as Kant was well aware. A thief who is forced to steal is just a
thief. Grice would engage in a bit of language botany, when exploring the ways
the adjective free is used, freely, in ordinary language: free fall,
alcohol-free, sugar-free, and his favourite: implicature-free. Grices more
systematic reflections deal with Pology, or creature construction. A vegetals,
for example is less free than an animal, but more free than a stone! And Humans
are more free than non-human. Grice wants to deal with some of the paradoxes
identified by Kant about freedom, and he succeeds in solving some of them.
There is a section on freedom in Action and events for PPQ where he expands on eleutheria and notes the
idiocy of a phrase like free fall. Grice was irritated by the fact that his
friend Hart wrote an essay on liberty and not on freedom, cf. praxis. Refs.:
essays on ‘practical reason,’ and “Aspects,” in BANC.
prædicatum: vide subjectification, and subjectum. Of
especial interest to Grice and Strawson. Lewis and Short have “praedīco,” which
they render as “to say or mention before or beforehand, to premise.” Grice as a
modista is interested in parts of speech: nomen (onoma) versus verbum (rhema)
being the classical, since Plato. The mediaeval modistae like Alcuin adapted
Aristotle, and Grice follows suit. Of particular relevance are the
‘syncategoremata,’ since Grice was obsessed with particles, and we cannot say
that ‘and’ is a predicate! This relates to the ‘categorema.’ Liddell and Scott
have “κατηγόρ-ημα,” which they render as “accusation, charge,” Gorg.Pal.22; but
in philosophy, as “predicate,” as per Arist.Int.20b32, Metaph.1053b19,
etc.; -- “οὐκ εὔοδον τὸ ἁπλοῖν ἐστι κ.” Epicur.Fr.18. – and as “head
of predicables,” in Arist.Metaph.1028a33,Ph.201a1, Zeno Stoic.1.25, etc.;
περὶ κατηγορημάτων Sphaer.ib.140. The term syncategorema comes from a passage
of Priscian in his Institutiones grammatice II , 15. “coniunctae plenam faciunt orationem, alias autem
partes, κατηγορήματα, hoc est consignificantia, appellabant.”
A distinction is made between two types of word classes ("partes
orationis," singular, "pars orationis") distinguished by
philosophers since Plato, viz. nouns (nomen, onoma) and verbs (verbum, rhema)
on the one hand, and a 'syncategorema or consignificantium. A
consignificantium, just as the unary functor "non," and any of the
three dyadic functors, "et," "vel" (or "aut") and
"si," does not have a definitive meaning on its own -- cf. praepositio,
cited by Grice, -- "the meaning of 'to,' the meaning of 'of,'" --
rather, they acquire meaning in combination or when con-joined to one or more
categorema. It is one thing to say that we employ a certain part of speech when
certain conditions are fulfilled and quite another to claim that the role in
the language of that part of speech is to say, even in an extended sense, that
those conditions are fulfilled.
prescriptivism:
Surely there are for Grice at least two
different modes, the buletic, which tends towards the prescriptive, and the
doxastic, which is mostly ‘descriptive.’ One has to be careful because Grice
thinks that what a philosopher like Strawson does with ‘descriptive’ expression
(like ‘true,’ ‘know’ and ‘good’) and talk of pseudo-descriptive. What is that
gives the buletic a ‘prescritive’ or deontic ring to it? This is Kant’s
question. Grice kept a copy of Foots on morality as a system of hypothetical
imperatives. “So Somervillian Oxonian it hurts!”. Grice took virtue ethics more
seriously than the early Hare. Hare will end up a virtue ethicist, since he
changed from a meta-ethicist to a moralist embracing a hedonistic version of
eudaemonist utilitarianism. Grice was more Aristotelianly conservative! Unlike
Hares and Grices meta-ethical sensitivities (as members of the Oxonian school
of ordinary-language philosophy), Foot suggests a different approach to ethics.
Grice admired Foots ability to make the right conceptual distinction. Foot
is following a very Oxonian tradition best represented by the work of
Warnock. Of course, Grice was over-familiar with the virtue vs. vice
distinction, since Hardie had instilled it on him at Corpus! For Grice,
virtue and vice (and the mesotes), display an interesting logical grammar,
though. Grice would say that rationality is a virtue; fallacious reasoning is a
vice. Some things Grice takes more of a moral standpoint about. To cheat
is neither irrational nor unreasonble: just plain repulsive. As
such, it would be a vice ‒ mind not getting caught in its grip! Grice is
concerned with vice in his account of akrasia or incontinentia. If agent A
KNOWS that doing x is virtuous, yet decides to do ~x, which is vicious, A is
being akratic. For Grice, akratic behaviour applies both in the buletic or
boulomaic realm and in the doxastic realm. And it is part of the
philosopher’s job to elucidate the conceptual intricacies attached to
it. 1. prima-facie (p⊃!q) V probably (p⊃q). 2.
prima-facie ((A and B) ⊃!p) V probably ( (A and B) ⊃p). 3. prima-facie ((A and B and C) ⊃!p) V probably ( (A and B and C,) ⊃p). 4. prima-facie ((all things before P V!p) V
probably ((all things before P) ⊃ p). 5.
prima-facie ((all things are considered ⊃ !p)
V probably (all things are considered, ⊃ p). 6.
!q V .q 7. Acc. Reasoning P wills that !q V Acc. Reasoning P that judges
q. Refs.: The main sources under ‘meta-ethics,’ above, BANC.
prejudices:
the life and opinions of H. P. Grice, by H. P. Grice! PGRICE had been in the
works for a while. Knowing this, Grice is able to start his auto-biography, or
memoir, to which he later adds a specific reply to this or that objection by
the editors. The reply is divided in neat sections. After a preamble displaying
his gratitude for the volume in his honour, Grice turns to his prejudices
and predilections; which become, the life and opinions of H. P. Grice. The
third section is a reply to the editorss overview of his work. This reply itself
is itself subdivided into questions of meaning and rationality, and questions
of Met. , philosophical psychology, and value. As the latter is repr. in
“Conception” it is possible to cite this sub-section from the Reply as a
separate piece. Grice originally entitles his essay in a brilliant manner,
echoing the style of an English non-conformist, almost: Prejudices and
predilections; which become, the life and opinions of H. P. Grice. With his
Richards, a nice Welsh surNames, Grice is punning on the first Names of both
Grandy and Warner. Grice is especially concerned with what Richards see as
an ontological commitment on Grices part to the abstract, yet poorly
individuated entity of a proposition. Grice also deals with the alleged
insufficiency in his conceptual analysis of reasoning. He brings for good
measure a point about a potential regressus ad infinitum in his account of a
chain of intentions involved in meaning that p and communicating that p. Even
if one of the drafts is titled festschrift, not by himself, this is not
strictly a festschrift in that Grices Names is hidden behind the acronym:
PGRICE. Notably on the philosophy of perception. Also in “Conception,” especially
that tricky third lecture on a metaphysical foundation for objective
value. Grice is supposed to reply to the individual contributors, who
include Strawson, but does not. I cancelled the implicatum! However, we may
identify in his oeuvre points of contacts of his own views with the
philosophers who contributed, notably Strawson. Most of this material is
reproduced verbatim, indeed, as the second part of his Reply to Richards, and
it is a philosophical memoir of which Grice is rightly proud. The life and
opinions are, almost in a joke on Witters, distinctly separated. Under Life,
Grice convers his conservative, irreverent rationalism making his early initial
appearance at Harborne under the influence of his non-conformist father, and
fermented at his tutorials with Hardie at Corpus, and his associations with
Austins play group on Saturday mornings, and some of whose members he lists
alphabetically: Austin, Gardiner, Grice, Hampshire, Hare, Hart, Nowell-Smith,
Paul, Pears, Strawson, Thomson, Urmson, and Warnock. Also, his joint
philosophising with Austin, Pears, Strawson, Thomson, and Warnock. Under
Opinions, Grice expands mainly on ordinary-language philosophy and his
Bunyanesque way to the City of Eternal Truth. Met. , Philosophical
Psychology, and Value, in “Conception,” is thus part of his Prejudices and
predilections. The philosophers Grice quotes are many and varied, such as
Bosanquet and Kneale, and from the other place, Keynes. Grice spends some
delightful time criticising the critics of ordinary-language philosophy such as
Bergmann (who needs an English futilitarian?) and Gellner. He also quotes from
Jespersen, who was "not a philosopher but wrote a philosophy of
grammar!" And Grice includes a reminiscence of the bombshells brought from
Vienna by the enfant terrible of Oxford philosophy Freddie Ayer, after being
sent to the Continent by Ryle. He recalls an air marshal at a dinner with
Strawson at Magdalen relishing on Cook Wilsons adage, What we know we know. And
more besides! After reminiscing for Clarendon, Grice will go on to reminisce
for Harvard University Press in the closing section of the Retrospective
epilogue. Refs.: The main source is “Reply to Richards,” and references to
Oxonianism, and linguistic botanising, BANC.
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