Overlooking conventions: The trouble with Devitt’s what is said
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Springer Nature
Fecha
2019Referencia bibliográfica
Published version: E. Romero and B. Soria, Overlooking Conventions. Croatian Journal of Philosophy Vol. XIX, No. 57, 2019. ISSN 1333-1108. ISSN 1847-6139
Patrocinador
Ministerio de Ciencia, innovación y Universidades PGC2018-098236-B-I00Resumen
In his forthcoming book, Overlooking Conventions: The Trouble with
Linguistic Pragmatism, Michael Devitt raises, once again, the debate between
minimalism and pragmatism to defend the former. He claims that,
by taking some overlooked conventions into account, a semantic notion of
what is said is possible. In this paper, we claim that a semantic notion of
what is said is not possible, especially if some overlooked compositional
conventions are considered. If, as Devitt defends, verbal activity is more
linguistically constrained, compositional linguistic rules should be included
in his catalogue of overlooked conventions and this entails an
important challenge to the minimalist claim that the semantic view of
what is said can handle all context relative phenomena. In this paper,
we argue that, when conventions concerning compositionality are not
overlooked, modulation should be added to the two qualifications (disambiguation
and saturation) accepted by Devitt in the constitution of
what is said. Thus, what is said is not always literally said and the
traditional semantic view of what is said cannot be saved.