Future Pasts
The Analytic Tradition in Twentieth Century Philosophy
Floyd, Juliet Associate Professor of Philosophy, Boston University
Shieh, Sanford Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Wesleyan University
Print publication date: 2001 (this edition)
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: November 2003
Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-513916-7







doi:10.1093/019513916X.003.0004

Dagfinn Føllesdal
Abstract: Husserl’s notion of the intentional object may be compared and contrasted with Bolzano’s and Frege’s views on the reference of linguistic expressions, especially since Bolzano was a main influence on the development of Husserl’s views. Føllesdal responds to David Bell’s criticisms of Føllesdal’s earlier readings of Husserl on reference, directedness, and the notion of a determinable object x. He argues that Husserl’s treatment of indexicals and reference is in some ways more insightful than the treatments of either Bolzano or Frege. To preempt the charge that Husserl’s philosophy forwards a naïve, overly mentalistic model of the mind and its expressive capacities, Føllesdal mentions that Husserl developed a thought experiment nearly identical to the well-known Twin Earth scenario later framed by Hilary Putnam to criticize internalist, mentalistic theories of meaning. Føllesdal argues that Husserl was ahead of his time in trying to account for the semantics of indexical and demonstrative terms, partly under the influence of Brentano. This study shows that the opposition between so-called continental and so-called analytic philosophy is not historically as well-grounded as many have supposed.

Keywords: Husserl, Bolzano, Frege, intentionality, intentional object, reference, identity, origins of analytic philosophy, phenomenology, internalism, externalism,

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Part I Before the Wars: Origins of Traditions
Part II Between the Wars
Part III After the Wars Rethinking the Future