Frege on Anti‐Psychologism and the Role of Logic in Thinking

Theoria 82 (4):302-328 (2016)
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Abstract

According to the Explanatory Problem with Frege's Platonism about Thoughts, the sharp separation between the psychological and the logical on which Frege famously insists is too sharp, leaving Frege no resources to show how it could be legitimate to invoke logical laws in an explanation of our activities of thinking. I argue that there is room in Frege's philosophy for such justificatory explanations. To see how, we need first to understand correctly the lesson of Frege's attack on psychologism as fundamentally marking a contrast between justification and explanation, and, second, we must take Frege to be committed to the idea that the laws of truth are normatively constitutive for the process of thinking.

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Thomas Lockhart
Auburn University

References found in this work

Frege, Kant, and the logic in logicism.John MacFarlane - 2002 - Philosophical Review 111 (1):25-65.
The Search for Logically Alien Thought.James Conant - 1992 - Philosophical Topics 20 (1):115-180.
1997.“On Sinn and Bedeutung.”.Gottlob Frege - 1997 - In Michael Beaney, Frege Reader. Cambridge: Wiley-Blackwell.
Basic laws of arithmetic.Gottlob Frege - 1893 - In The basic laws of arithmetic. Berkeley,: University of California Press.
Letter to Russell, 22.6. 1902.Gottlob Frege - 1997 - In Michael Beaney, Frege Reader. Cambridge: Wiley-Blackwell.

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