Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter (
2022)
Copy
BIBTEX
Abstract
This paper explores three important interrelated themes in Putnam’s
philosophy: language, meaning, and the context-sensitivity of “truth-evaluable
content.” It shows how Putnam’s own version of semantic externalism is able to
steer a middle course between an internalism about meaning that requires a
“language of thought” (or “mentalese”) and a mind-independent realism about
meaning that requires Platonic objects (or other such “abstract entities”), while
doing justice to how ascriptions of meaning are causally related to the objective
world. The following account is able to allow for the primacy of language over
thought while ensuring that the content of thought is partially fixed by the external
world. The emphasis in Putnam’s later writings on the “context sensitivity”
of meaning are often construed as marking a major departure from his earlier
thought. It is here argued that such an interpretation involves a misunderstanding
both of the commitments of Putnam’s original form of semantic externalism
and of the implications of the version of context sensitivity he embraces.