Theories of truth and theories of meaning: a discussion of semantic skepticism and its possible solutions based on Quine, Davidson, and Dummett's work

Quine's semantic skepticism asserts that two or more hypotheses about the meaning of p that are equally consistent with behavioral facts do not guarantee the same theoretical paradigm of p's meaning. Thus, a theory of truth for p is insufficient to entail a theory of meaning for p. Davidso...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lucas Vollet
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Faculdade Católica de Fortaleza 2024-12-01
Series:Logos & Culturas
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.catolicadefortaleza.edu.br/index.php/logosculturas/article/view/560
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832542651999584256
author Lucas Vollet
author_facet Lucas Vollet
author_sort Lucas Vollet
collection DOAJ
description Quine's semantic skepticism asserts that two or more hypotheses about the meaning of p that are equally consistent with behavioral facts do not guarantee the same theoretical paradigm of p's meaning. Thus, a theory of truth for p is insufficient to entail a theory of meaning for p. Davidson contends that, while Quine is correct regarding the underdeterminacy of a theory of meaning by evidence, this does not rule out a theory of meaning. A theory of truth – consistent with Tarski's Tconvention – implies a theory of meaning. Dummett, however, thinks that a theory of truth fails to frame non-straightforward stipulations governing the role of sentences in cases involving nonclassical standards of proof. "Truth" is insufficient to be used as an idealized parameter to exhaust conceivable patterns for semantic theories. Quine highlights the weakness of a truth theory grounded in set theory and observation for generating stable theories of meaning. Davidson downplays the significance of this weakness and avoids reaching a semantic-skeptical conclusion, as he believes semantics need only be as robust as the theory of truth. Dummett contends that, while this weakness is a serious threat, it has no bearing on the objective parameters for a theory of meaning, because meaning is intended to function in roles truth standards cannot: defining the theoretical limits of a theory of assertion-judgment. These three authors are examined in this article to determine the scope of semantic skepticism and the possible responses to it.
format Article
id doaj-art-5f19989e44b6456ebc146caf9466ab87
institution Kabale University
issn 2763-986X
language English
publishDate 2024-12-01
publisher Faculdade Católica de Fortaleza
record_format Article
series Logos & Culturas
spelling doaj-art-5f19989e44b6456ebc146caf9466ab872025-02-03T19:22:45ZengFaculdade Católica de FortalezaLogos & Culturas2763-986X2024-12-0142Theories of truth and theories of meaning: a discussion of semantic skepticism and its possible solutions based on Quine, Davidson, and Dummett's workLucas Vollet0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6300-491XUniversidade Federal de Santa Catarina (UFSC)Quine's semantic skepticism asserts that two or more hypotheses about the meaning of p that are equally consistent with behavioral facts do not guarantee the same theoretical paradigm of p's meaning. Thus, a theory of truth for p is insufficient to entail a theory of meaning for p. Davidson contends that, while Quine is correct regarding the underdeterminacy of a theory of meaning by evidence, this does not rule out a theory of meaning. A theory of truth – consistent with Tarski's Tconvention – implies a theory of meaning. Dummett, however, thinks that a theory of truth fails to frame non-straightforward stipulations governing the role of sentences in cases involving nonclassical standards of proof. "Truth" is insufficient to be used as an idealized parameter to exhaust conceivable patterns for semantic theories. Quine highlights the weakness of a truth theory grounded in set theory and observation for generating stable theories of meaning. Davidson downplays the significance of this weakness and avoids reaching a semantic-skeptical conclusion, as he believes semantics need only be as robust as the theory of truth. Dummett contends that, while this weakness is a serious threat, it has no bearing on the objective parameters for a theory of meaning, because meaning is intended to function in roles truth standards cannot: defining the theoretical limits of a theory of assertion-judgment. These three authors are examined in this article to determine the scope of semantic skepticism and the possible responses to it.https://ojs.catolicadefortaleza.edu.br/index.php/logosculturas/article/view/560semantic skepticismmeaning-theoryquinedavidsondummett
spellingShingle Lucas Vollet
Theories of truth and theories of meaning: a discussion of semantic skepticism and its possible solutions based on Quine, Davidson, and Dummett's work
Logos & Culturas
semantic skepticism
meaning-theory
quine
davidson
dummett
title Theories of truth and theories of meaning: a discussion of semantic skepticism and its possible solutions based on Quine, Davidson, and Dummett's work
title_full Theories of truth and theories of meaning: a discussion of semantic skepticism and its possible solutions based on Quine, Davidson, and Dummett's work
title_fullStr Theories of truth and theories of meaning: a discussion of semantic skepticism and its possible solutions based on Quine, Davidson, and Dummett's work
title_full_unstemmed Theories of truth and theories of meaning: a discussion of semantic skepticism and its possible solutions based on Quine, Davidson, and Dummett's work
title_short Theories of truth and theories of meaning: a discussion of semantic skepticism and its possible solutions based on Quine, Davidson, and Dummett's work
title_sort theories of truth and theories of meaning a discussion of semantic skepticism and its possible solutions based on quine davidson and dummett s work
topic semantic skepticism
meaning-theory
quine
davidson
dummett
url https://ojs.catolicadefortaleza.edu.br/index.php/logosculturas/article/view/560
work_keys_str_mv AT lucasvollet theoriesoftruthandtheoriesofmeaningadiscussionofsemanticskepticismanditspossiblesolutionsbasedonquinedavidsonanddummettswork