Natural kinds and a posteriori necessities: Putnam pro Kripke, Putnam versus Kripke

D. Sepetyi
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Abstract

Most contemporary analytic philosophers of language and mind accept the view that there is a wide class of terms, “natural kind terms”, which includes names of substances (the most common example is “water”), of species of animals, and of many other kinds of things in nature, whose meaning and reference is determined in the way explained by the theory developed in the 1970s by Saul Kripke and Hilary Putnam. The theory is often referred to as “the Kripke-Putnam theory” and is supposed to have such achievements as the overthrow of the earlier dominant Fregean theory of word-meanings (dubbed “descriptivism” by Kripke) as determined by the concepts in our minds, providing support for the “externalist” approach to linguistic meanings (in line with Putnam’s claim that “"Meanings" just ain’t in the head”), and the discovery that there is a wide class of truths (such as that water is H20) that are both a posteriori and necessary. Although the priority in the development of this theory belongs to Kripke, it could hardly gain such a wide acceptance without contributions by Putnam, which turned out to be very influential. However, the habitual idea of “the Kripke-Putnam theory”, as one theory, tends to play down the differences between Putnam’s and Kripke’s approaches and to hush up the fact that in his late works, of 1983 and 1990, Putnam revised and abandoned pretty much of his “Kripkean” views of 1970-ies; in particular, repudiated the pride of Kripke’s theory, the idea of necessary a posteriori truths. This article makes critical analysis and evaluation of Putnam’s ideas and arguments usually credited as important contributions to “the Kripke-Putnam theory”, and highlights the main points of the revision in late Putnam’s works. The case is made that Putnam's famous argument for externalism about meanings, the Twin-Earth thought experiment, is question-begging, fails to do justice to likely changes in the meanings of words with the development of knowledge, and conflicts with the linguistic practice in the relevantly similar case of “jade”. Putnam's argument for externalism from the division of linguistic labour is not cogent too, because “semantic deference” is itself a matter of what is there in “heads” - of some (non-expert) heads deferring to other (recognised as expert) heads. Eventually, on close inspection and in the light of Putnam's later reexplanation and revision, his account of meaning and reference turns out to be a sophisticated variety of conceptualism/internalism.
自然种类和后天必需品:普特南对克里普克,普特南对克里普克
大多数当代语言和精神分析哲学家都接受这样一种观点,即存在一个广泛的术语类别,即“自然类术语”,其中包括物质(最常见的例子是“水”)、动物物种和自然界中许多其他种类的事物的名称,这些术语的含义和所指是由索尔·克里普克和希拉里·普特南在20世纪70年代发展起来的理论所解释的。该理论通常被称为“克里普克-帕特南理论”,它被认为具有以下成就:推翻了早期占主导地位的弗雷格词义理论(克里普克称之为“描述主义”),认为词义是由我们头脑中的概念决定的,为语言意义的“外在主义”方法提供了支持(符合帕特南的说法,“意义”只是不在头脑中”);发现有大量的真理(比如水是h2o)既是后天的又是必然的。虽然这一理论的发展优先属于Kripke,但如果没有Putnam的贡献,它很难得到如此广泛的接受,而Putnam的贡献是非常有影响力的。然而,“克里普克-帕特南理论”的惯常观念,作为一个理论,倾向于淡化帕特南和克里普克方法之间的差异,并掩盖这样一个事实:在他1983年和1990年的晚期作品中,帕特南修改并放弃了他在20世纪70年代的“克里普克”观点;特别是,他否定了克里普克理论的骄傲,即必然的事后真理的观点。本文对帕特南通常被认为是“克里普克-帕特南理论”的重要贡献的思想和论点进行了批判性的分析和评价,并突出了帕特南后期作品修订的要点。本文认为,帕特南关于意义的外在主义的著名论证——“双地球”思想实验——是一种回避问题的论证,不能公正地对待随着知识的发展而可能发生的词语意义变化,并且与“玉”的相关类似案例中的语言实践相冲突。帕特南关于语言劳动分工的外在主义的论点也不令人信服,因为“语义遵从”本身就是“头脑”中存在的东西的问题——一些(非专家)头脑服从其他(公认的专家)头脑。最终,通过仔细观察和普特南后来的重新解释和修订,他对意义和指称的解释变成了一种复杂的概念主义/内在主义。
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