One common criticism of deflationism is that it does not have the resources to explain defective discourse (e.g., vagueness, referential indeterminacy, confusion, etc.). This problem is especially pressing for someone like Robert Brandom, who not only endorses deflationist accounts of truth, reference, and predication, but also refuses to use representational relations to explain content and propositional attitudes. To address this problem, I suggest that Brandom should explain defective discourse in terms of what it is to treat some portion of discourse as defective. To illustrate this strategy, I present an extension of his theory of content and use it to provide an explanation of confusion. The result is a theory of confusion based on Joseph Camp’s recent treatment. The extension of Brandom’s theory of content involves additions to his account of scorekeeping that allow members of a discursive practice to accept different standards of inferential correctness.
2024. Compositionality, communication, and commitments. Synthese 204:1
Drobňák, Matej
2024. Communication Without Shared Meanings. Acta Analytica
Iikawa, Haruka
2023. Taming Holism: an Inferentialist Account of Communication. Acta Analytica 38:4 ► pp. 593 ff.
Iikawa, Haruka
2024. Understanding the other from an inferentialist perspective. Theoria 90:3 ► pp. 322 ff.
SEBBAN, YAËL
2020. Jeux dialogiques et processus discursif. Conséquences du débat entre Habermas et Brandom. Dialogue 59:2 ► pp. 305 ff.
Canale, Damiano
2015. What Inferentialism Tells Us About Vagueness in Law. SSRN Electronic Journal
Canale, Damiano
2017. What Inferentialism Tells Us About Combinatory Vagueness in Law. In Pragmatics and Law [Perspectives in Pragmatics, Philosophy & Psychology, 10], ► pp. 43 ff.
ALXATIB, SAM & FRANCIS JEFFRY PELLETIER
2011. The Psychology of Vagueness: Borderline Cases and Contradictions. Mind & Language 26:3 ► pp. 287 ff.
Gelfert, Axel
2011. Expertise, Argumentation, and the End of Inquiry. Argumentation 25:3 ► pp. 297 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 28 october 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
Any errors therein should be reported to them.