Dummett, Michael Emeritus Professor of Philosophy, University of Oxford
Print publication date: 1996 (this edition)
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online:
Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-823621-4
doi:10.1093/0198236212.003.0009
 

Michael Dummett
Donald Davidson raised the issue of the link between mood, force, and convention. Because he does not make a distinction between the force of an utterance and the point of it, subsuming both under a general notion of use to which he put his utterance, Davidson attempts to delete any account of force from a theory of meaning, and associate it with the general procedure of divining someone else's intentions. This he cannot maintain, since, to grasp what it is for a sentence to carry a particular kind of force is to be master of a practice, of something that has to be learned and whose existence depends upon a common participation in it by the speakers of the language.
Keywords: assertion, Davidson, force, mood, theory of meaning, truth, Wittgenstein
doi:10.1093/0198236212.003.0009
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