{"title":"Kripkeans of the world, unite!","authors":"F. Islam, Giosuè Baggio","doi":"10.1093/jos/ffaa001","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"\n This paper revisits a study by Machery et al. (2004), suggesting that, in experimental versions of Kripke’s (1980) fictional cases on the use of proper names, Westerners are more likely than East Asian participants to show intuitions compatible with Kripke’s causal-historical (CH) theory of reference. We conducted two experiments, recruting participants from Norway and Bangladesh, either in English (experiment 1; N = 75) or in the participants’ native languages (experiment 2; N = 60), using modified cases and a new approach to data analysis. We replicated the results of Machery et al. (2004), but we show that the residual finding—i.e., that participants who are not aligned with CH produce responses consistent with a definite descriptions (DD) theory of reference—does not hold. Most participants in our experiments, and nearly all those who do not provide CH answers, respond as predicted by a theory that accommodates speaker’s reference in reasoning about uses of proper names, not according to DD. We suggest that cross-cultural variation in this task is real. However, explanations of variation within or across cultures need not invoke competing theories of reference (CH vs DD), and can be unified within a single, broadly Kripkean analysis that honors the basic distinction between semantic reference and speaker’s reference.","PeriodicalId":15055,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Biomedical Semantics","volume":"5 1","pages":"297-309"},"PeriodicalIF":1.6000,"publicationDate":"2020-05-07","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Biomedical Semantics","FirstCategoryId":"5","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1093/jos/ffaa001","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"工程技术","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"MATHEMATICAL & COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 2
Abstract
This paper revisits a study by Machery et al. (2004), suggesting that, in experimental versions of Kripke’s (1980) fictional cases on the use of proper names, Westerners are more likely than East Asian participants to show intuitions compatible with Kripke’s causal-historical (CH) theory of reference. We conducted two experiments, recruting participants from Norway and Bangladesh, either in English (experiment 1; N = 75) or in the participants’ native languages (experiment 2; N = 60), using modified cases and a new approach to data analysis. We replicated the results of Machery et al. (2004), but we show that the residual finding—i.e., that participants who are not aligned with CH produce responses consistent with a definite descriptions (DD) theory of reference—does not hold. Most participants in our experiments, and nearly all those who do not provide CH answers, respond as predicted by a theory that accommodates speaker’s reference in reasoning about uses of proper names, not according to DD. We suggest that cross-cultural variation in this task is real. However, explanations of variation within or across cultures need not invoke competing theories of reference (CH vs DD), and can be unified within a single, broadly Kripkean analysis that honors the basic distinction between semantic reference and speaker’s reference.
本文回顾了Machery等人(2004)的一项研究,该研究表明,在Kripke(1980)关于专有名称使用的虚构案例的实验版本中,西方人比东亚参与者更有可能表现出与Kripke的因果历史(CH)参考理论相一致的直觉。我们进行了两个实验,招募来自挪威和孟加拉国的参与者,一个是用英语(实验1;N = 75)或参与者的母语(实验2;N = 60),使用修改的案例和新的数据分析方法。我们复制了Machery et al.(2004)的结果,但我们表明残差发现-即。不与CH一致的参与者产生与明确描述(DD)参考理论一致的反应,这一观点并不成立。在我们的实验中,大多数参与者,以及几乎所有没有提供CH答案的人,都按照一个理论的预测做出了反应,该理论考虑了说话者在推理专有名称使用时的参考,而不是根据DD。我们认为,这个任务中的跨文化差异是真实存在的。然而,对文化内部或跨文化差异的解释不需要引用相互竞争的指称理论(CH vs DD),而是可以统一在一个单一的、宽泛的Kripkean分析中,该分析尊重语义指称和说话人指称之间的基本区别。
期刊介绍:
Journal of Biomedical Semantics addresses issues of semantic enrichment and semantic processing in the biomedical domain. The scope of the journal covers two main areas:
Infrastructure for biomedical semantics: focusing on semantic resources and repositories, meta-data management and resource description, knowledge representation and semantic frameworks, the Biomedical Semantic Web, and semantic interoperability.
Semantic mining, annotation, and analysis: focusing on approaches and applications of semantic resources; and tools for investigation, reasoning, prediction, and discoveries in biomedicine.