+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Causal Theories

Causal Theories

Date post: 24-Feb-2016
Category:
Upload: job
View: 24 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
Causal Theories. recap. Kripke’s Picture. “Someone , let’s say, a baby, is born; his parents call him by a certain name. They talk about him to their friends, other people meet him. Through various sorts of talk the name is spread from link to link as if by a chain…”. Kripke’s Picture. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Popular Tags:
43
Causal Theories
Transcript
Page 1: Causal Theories

Causal Theories

Page 2: Causal Theories

RECAP

Page 3: Causal Theories

Kripke’s Picture

“Someone, let’s say, a baby, is born; his parents call him by a certain name. They talk about him to their friends, other people meet him.

Through various sorts of talk the name is spread from link to link as if by a chain…”

Page 4: Causal Theories

Kripke’s Picture

“A speaker who is on the far end of this chain, who has heard about, say Richard Feynman, in the market place or elsewhere, may be referring to Richard Feynman even though he can’t remember from whom he first heard of Feynman or from whom he ever heard of Feynman.”

Page 5: Causal Theories

Kripke’s Picture

“A rough statement of a theory might be the following: An initial ‘baptism’ takes place. Here the object may be named by ostension, or the reference of the name may be fixed by a description…”

Page 6: Causal Theories

Kripke’s Picture

“When the name is ‘passed from link to link’, the receiver of the name must, I think, intend when he learns it to use it with the same reference as the man from whom he heard it.”

Page 7: Causal Theories

The Causal-Historical Theory

Let’s call that baby ‘Feynman’

FeynmanFeynmanFeynmanFeynman

Page 8: Causal Theories

The Causal-Historical Theory

Let’s call that baby ‘Feynman’

FeynmanFeynmanFeynmanFeynman

Historical Chain of Transmission

Page 9: Causal Theories

The Causal-Historical Theory

Denotation

FeynmanFeynmanFeynmanFeynman

Page 10: Causal Theories

No Connotations

The causal-historical theory, unlike the other theories we’ve considered so far, does not use a connotation (idea, experience, definition) to determine the denotation.

Denotations are determined by non-mental facts.

Page 11: Causal Theories

Natural Kinds

Kripke and another philosopher Hilary Putnam wanted to generalize what was true of names to “natural kind terms” (a phrase introduced by Quine).

Page 12: Causal Theories
Page 13: Causal Theories

The Causal-Historical Theory

Let’s call that thing a “tiger.”

TIGERTIGERTIGERTIGER

Page 14: Causal Theories

THE EPISTEMIC AND MODAL ARGUMENTS

Page 15: Causal Theories

Definitional Truths

We know “definitional” truths simply by knowing the meanings of the words.

We know them with certainty.

Page 16: Causal Theories

Example

“Boars are male” is a definitional truth. “boar” just means male pig.

Anyone who knows what “boar” means knows that “boars are male” is true.

Page 17: Causal Theories

Descriptivism

The descriptivist position that Kripke argued against held that the meaning of a name was a definition.

Page 18: Causal Theories

Descriptivism

So, for example, “Aristotle” might mean “the last great philosopher of antiquity.”

Page 19: Causal Theories

The Epistemic Argument

However, it still seems as though you don’t have the same sort of epistemic access to “Aristotle was a philosopher” as to other clearer cases of definitional truths like “boars are male.”

Page 20: Causal Theories

The Epistemic Argument

You don’t know for sure that Aristotle was the a philosopher. It could turn out false.

Maybe Aristotle was a farmer and philosophical writings were falsely attributed to him.

Maybe Aristotle’s writings were medieval forgeries.

Page 21: Causal Theories

The Epistemic Argument

Premise 1: If “Aristotle” means the last great philosopher of antiquity, then anyone who knows what “Aristotle” means should know with certainty that Aristotle was the last great philosopher of antiquity.Premise 2: We don’t know with certainty that Aristotle was the last great philosopher of antiquity.

Page 22: Causal Theories

The Epistemic Argument

Conclusion: “Aristotle” does not mean the last great philosopher of antiquity.

Similar reasoning works for any proposed definition of “Aristotle.”

Page 23: Causal Theories

The Modal Argument

Premise 1: If “Aristotle” means the last great philosopher of antiquity, then any true sentence containing the word “Aristotle” will still be true if you replace “Aristotle” with “the last great philosopher of antiquity.”

Page 24: Causal Theories

Modal Properties

Some things could not possibly have gone differently. These things are necessary.

Some things did not happen, but could have. These things are merely possible.

Page 25: Causal Theories

The Modal Argument

FALSE: If things had gone differently, Aristotle might not have been Aristotle.

TRUE: If things had gone differently, Aristotle might not have been the last great philosopher of antiquity.

Page 26: Causal Theories

The Modal Argument

Conclusion: “Aristotle” does not mean the last great philosopher of antiquity.

Similar reasoning works for any proposed definition of “Aristotle.”

Page 27: Causal Theories

CHALLENGES

Page 28: Causal Theories

Huge Literature

There’s been an enormous literature on Kripke and Putnam (and I should mention Donnellan). I can’t explain all of the objections, but I’ll mention a few classic ones, and a recent challenge from Machery, Mallon, Nichols & Stich.

Page 29: Causal Theories

The Story of Madagascar

Let’s call that place ‘Mogadishu’

MadagascarMadagasceirMadagascuMadagishu

Page 30: Causal Theories

C.H. Theory Predicts

Let’s call that place ‘Mogadishu’

MadagascarMadagasceirMadagascuMadagishu

Denotation

Page 31: Causal Theories

C.H. Theory Predicts

Let’s call that place ‘Mogadishu’

MadagascarMadagasceirMadagascuMadagishu

DenotationWrong!!!

Page 32: Causal Theories

Real Denotation

Let’s call that place ‘Mogadishu’

MadagascarMadagasceirMadagascuMadagishu

Denotation

Page 33: Causal Theories

Madagascar

The “Madagascar” case illustrates a general point: the Causal-Historical Theory cannot account for unintentional meaning change.

Page 34: Causal Theories
Page 35: Causal Theories

Gareth

Saul

Page 36: Causal Theories

Saul

Gareth

Page 37: Causal Theories

Twins Switched at Birth

Now imagine it’s 73 years later and we’ve been calling one man “Saul” for 72.99 years, even though (unknown to us) he was baptized “Gareth.” Saul

Page 38: Causal Theories

Twins Switched at Birth

TRUE or FALSE: Saul is wearing a hat.

Saul

Page 39: Causal Theories

The Causal-Historical Theory

Let’s call that stuff “jade.”

JADEJADEJADEJADE

Page 40: Causal Theories

Jade

There are two distinct minerals called ‘jade’: jadeite and nephrite, but this wasn’t discovered until 1863 by Alexis Damour.

Since jade is not a natural kind, the Causal-Historical Theory predicts that there is nothing that “jade” means.

Page 41: Causal Theories

Machery, Mallon, Nichols & Stich

In their highly influential 2004 paper “Semantics, Cross-Cultural Style,” MMNS claim to uncover evidence that while Westerners have intuitions that accord with Kripke and Putnam (that is for causal-historical theories and against descriptivism), East Asians have (on average) more descriptivist intuitions. For example, they think in the Twin Earth case, XYZ is water. According to MMNS!

Page 42: Causal Theories

MMNS

I am personally weary of the methodology, and I find it a little bit silly to think that anyone, East Asian or not, thinks that Americans who only believe about Neil Armstrong that he was the first man in space, speak truly when they say “Neil Armstrong was the first man in space.” [Descriptivist says TRUE because Yuri Gagarin satisfies description, hence “Neal Armstrong” means Yuri Gagarin, and it’s true that Yuri Gagarin was the first man in space!]

Page 43: Causal Theories

MMNS

Still, this is another important reminder that the subjects of philosophy discussion cannot always be resolved by philosophers (at least, philosophers who don’t have labs and test subjects). Sometimes philosophical questions are empirical, and can’t be solved solely through debate.


Recommended