Wittgensteinean notions of uniformity and Kripkensteinean skepticism

In Claudine Verheggen, Kripke's Wittgenstein on Rules and Private Language at 40. New York,: Cambridge University Press (2024)
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Abstract

My point of departure in this paper is a reading of Wittgenstein I defend elsewhere on which he never engaged with semantic skepticism in his texts. While this reading distances Wittgenstein from Kripke, an intriguing indirect connection between their work remains. Certain concepts like regularity, constancy, and (qualitative) sameness play a significant role in addressing questions in the foundations of semantics for Wittgenstein. I discuss how, if Wittgenstein's appeal to these notions is legitimate, they may also be of use in difusing (the distinctively metaphysical aspects of) semantic skepticism. Along the way, I contrast the resulting position with its nearest historical antecedent in the work of David Lewis, arguing that Lewis's appeal to metaphysically distinguished properties in the foundations of semantics is not only superfluous, but counterproductive.

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James R. Shaw
University of Pittsburgh

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