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Incoherent Meanings
Incoherent Meanings

Author(s): Michael Devitt
Subject(s): Semantics, Pragmatics, Sociolinguistics, Philosophy of Language, Theory of Communication
Published by: KruZak
Keywords: Coherence; context sensitivity; reference; thought meaning/content; speaker meaning; semantic meaning; communication;

Summary/Abstract: Stojnić holds the radical view that coherence relations determine the reference of context-sensitive language. I argue against this from the theoretical perspective presented in Overlooking Conventions (2021). Theoretical interest in language comes from an interest in thoughts and their communication. A language is a system of symbols, constituted by a set of governing rules, used (inter alia) to communicate the meanings (contents) of thoughts. Thought meanings, hence speaker meanings, are explanatorily prior to semantic meanings. So, we start our consideration of the theoretical place of coherence by considering the bearing of coherence on thought meanings. The paper argues that a person can have any thought at all, however incoherent. So, a thought’s meaning is independent of its coherence. Any thought can be expressed in an utterance. The semantic meaning of any utterance governed by the linguistic rules will be the meaning of the thought it expresses. So, the utterance’s meaning is independent of its coherence. The paper concludes that coherence has no place in the theory of meaning or reference. Nonetheless, it has a place in the theory of communication. I suspect that the error exemplifi es the widespread confusion of the metaphysics of meaning with the epistemology of interpretation.

  • Issue Year: XXIII/2023
  • Issue No: 69
  • Page Range: 335-347
  • Page Count: 13
  • Language: English