Abstract
Kripke thought that the meaning paradox articulated in Wittgenstein on Rules and
Private Language arises due to a logical tension. This diagnosis, however, doesn’t
account for the enduring controversy surrounding the paradox. I argue that the
meaning paradox stems instead from a tension inherent in two conflicting philo-
sophical methodologies: theoretical internalism and theoretical externalism. Inter-
nalism, as a philosophical methodology, takes for granted the contents of our minds,
whereas externalism takes for granted empirical data and shared notions of common
sense. Two of the constraints on a straight solution to the paradox—the Guidance
Constraint and the Error Constraint—rely for their plausibility on theoretical inter-
nalism and theoretical externalism, respectively. A straight solution thus rests on
resolving the tension between these two conflicting philosophical methods. There
are, accordingly, two ways to dodge the problem. Kripke’s skeptical solution favors
theoretical externalism, but a skeptical solution favoring theoretical internalism is
available as well.