ABSTRACT

A Critical Introduction to Philosophy of Language is a historically oriented introduction to the central themes in philosophy of language. Its narrative arc covers Locke’s ‘idea’ theory, Mill’s empiricist account of math and logic, Frege and Russell’s development of modern logic and its subsequent deployment in their pioneering program of ‘logical analysis’, Ayer and Carnap’s logical positivism, Quine’s critique of logical positivism and elaboration of a naturalist-behaviorist approach to meaning, and later-Wittgenstein’s ‘ordinary language philosophy’-inspired rejection of the project of logical analysis. Thus, it historically situates the two central programs in early twentieth-century English-speaking philosophy -- logical analysis and logical positivism -- and discusses the central critiques they face later in the century in the works of Quine and the later-Wittgenstein. Unlike other secondary studies in philosophy of language, A Critical Introduction to Philosophy of Language is not just a ‘greatest hits album’, i.e., a discontinuous compilation in which classics in the field are presented together with their standard criticisms one after the other. Instead, Fennell develops a particular, historical-thematic narrative in which the figures and ideas he treats are introduced in highly intentional ways. And by cross-referencing them throughout his discussions, he highlights the contributions they make to the narrative they comprise.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

Logico-Semantics, Logical Positivism, and their Discontents

chapter 2|19 pages

Classical Empiricism and the Problem of the A Priori

Mill, Kant, and Frege

chapter 3|22 pages

Frege’s Begriffsschrift

chapter 4|20 pages

Frege on Sense and Reference

chapter 5|24 pages

Russell’s Theory of Descriptions

chapter 6|25 pages

Kripke’s Causal Theory of Reference

chapter 7|22 pages

Logical Positivism I

Ayer

chapter 8|16 pages

Logical Positivism II

Carnap

chapter 9|21 pages

Quine’s Critique of Positivism I

‘Two Dogmas of Empiricism’

chapter 10|10 pages

Quine’s Critique of Positivism II

Anti-Conventionalism

chapter 11|19 pages

Quine

Radical Translation and the Indeterminacy of Meaning

chapter 12|15 pages

Later-Wittgenstein I

Ordinary Language Philosophy and the Critique of Ostension

chapter 13|33 pages

Later-Wittgenstein II

The Rule-Following Considerations

chapter 14|19 pages

Later-Wittgenstein III

The Private Language Argument