Linguistic Epiphenomenalism ‐ Davidson and Chomsky on the Status of Public Languages

Journal of the Philosophy of History 4 (1):1-22 (2010)
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Abstract

The aim of this paper is to highlight an individualist streak in both Davidson’s conception of language and Chomsky’s. In the first part of the paper, I argue that in Davidson’s case this individualist streak is a consequence of an excessively strong conception of what the compositional nature of linguistic meaning requires, and I offer a weaker conception of that requirement that can do justice to both the publicity and the compositionality of language. In the second part of the paper, I offer a comparison between Davidson’s position on the unreality of public languages, and Chomsky’s position regarding the epiphenomenal status of “externalized” languages. In Chomsky’s case, as in Davidson’s, languages are individuated in terms of the formal theories that serve to account for their systematic structure, and this assumption rests upon a similarly strong and similarly questionable understanding of what it is to employ finite means in pursuit of an infinite task. The alternative, at which I can only hint, is a view of language as a social and historical reality, i.e., a realm of social fact that cannot be exhausted by any formal theory and cannot be reduced to properties of individual speakers

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Isaac (Yanni) Nevo
Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

Citations of this work

The Ethics of Humanistic Scholarship: On Knowledge and Acknowledgement.Isaac Nevo - 2013 - Journal of the Philosophy of History 7 (3):266-298.

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References found in this work

The second person.Donald Davidson - 1992 - Midwest Studies in Philosophy 17 (1):255-267.
In defense of public language.Ruth Garrett Millikan - 2003 - In Louise M. Antony & Norbert Hornstein (eds.), Chomsky and His Critics. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 215–237.

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