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Publication details

Year: 2008

Pages: 283-308

Series: Synthese

Full citation:

Thompson, "Grades of meaning", Synthese 161 (2), 2008, pp. 283-308.

Grades of meaning

Thompson

pp. 283-308

in: Synthese 161 (2), 2008.

Abstract

In this paper, I lend novel support to H. P. Grice’s account of speaker meaning (GASM) by blunting the force of a significant objection. Stephen Schiffer has argued that in order to make GASM sufficient, one must add restrictions that are psychologically impossible to fulfill, thereby making GASM untenable. In what follows, I explain the elements of GASM that require it to invoke these psychologically unrealizable restrictions. I then accept Schiffer’s criticism, but modify its significance to GASM. I argue that the problem that Schiffer notes is not a reason to reject GASM, but a reason to embrace it. GASM shows that meaning is best understood as an absolute concept—an unrealizable ideal limit. Taking some inspiration from contextualist theories of knowledge attribution, I argue that my version of GASM offers a useful contextualist account of meaning attribution. Hence, pragmatic theories of meaning and communication should not wholly exclude GASM from their theorizing, at least not for the reasons that are commonly given.

Cited authors

Publication details

Year: 2008

Pages: 283-308

Series: Synthese

Full citation:

Thompson, "Grades of meaning", Synthese 161 (2), 2008, pp. 283-308.