Abstract
The paper concentrates on an appreciation of
W.V. Quine’s thought on meaning and how it escalates
beyond the meaning holism and confirmation holism,
thereby paving the way for a ‘meaning nihilism’ and
‘confirmation rejectionism’. My effort would be to see
that how could the acceptance of radical naturalism in
Quine’s theory of meaning escorts him to the indeterminacy
thesis of meaning. There is an interesting shift from
epistemology to language as Quine considers that a person
who is aware of linguistic trick can be the master of
referential language. Another important question is that
how could Quine’s radical translation thesis reduce into
semantic indeterminacy that is a consequence of his confirmation
method. I think that the notion and the analysis
of meaning became hopelessly vague in Quine’s later
work. I further argue on Quine’s position of meaning that
I call, following Hilary Putnam, ‘meaning nihilism’. It
seems to me that Quine had no belief like ‘meaning consists
in’, or ‘meaning depends on’ something. Through
this argument, I would like to challenge the confirmation
holism that was foisted by Fodor on Quine’s thesis. My
attempt would be to scrutinize Putnam’s point of view
that Quine was neither a confirmation holist nor a meaning
holist. I think that both Putnam and Quine denied the
concept of constitutive connection of meaning as a second
grade notion not only from the realm of semantic, but also
from the perspective of epistemology. So, linguistic
meaning cannot be formed by any sample of its uses. For
Quine, the concept of meaning in metaphysics is heuristic
and need not be taken seriously in any ‘science worthy’
literature.