Notes of Donald Davidson: "Truth and Meaning"
The main point of this article concerns the goal of supplying a
theory of meaning for language L that shows how the meanings of sentences in L
depends on the meanings of words in L.
Davidson thinks that the way to build such a theory is by constructing a
(recursive) definition of truth-in-L. (p. 98)
The point of these notes is to explain what this means and how Davidson
argues for this conclusion.
WHAT THIS MEANS
A theory of meaning for a language L would be a theory such that
if anyone understood the theory, they would thereby understand the language
L. If the theory showed how the meaning
of sentences depended on the meanings of words, then the theory would have to
tell you, given a language consisting of a finite lexicon of words and
syntactical rules for the combinations of words into sentences, how to figure
out the meaning of any sentence.
Davidson tells us how to build such a theory: define, for the
language L, a predicate true-in-L, like the predicate in English "is
true" such that you could generate theorems of the form, for instance:
"Grass is green" is true if and only if grass is green
for every true (declarative) sentence that can be formed in
English.
DAVIDSON'S ARGUMENT
Much of Davidson's argument proceeds by a combination of
elimination and bold conjecture: X won't work, Y won't work, therefore Z. Not
the greatest form of argument. But sometimes you take what you can get.
As far as I'm concerned, the arguments all take place on pp 92-98
(the article takes up pp 92-110)
I will break this down in several steps
Remember, the goal is a theory of how (a potentially infinite
collection of) sentences can be meaningful (understandable) based on
understanding the way a finite collection of words and other pieces of syntax
contribute to the meaning (understandability) of a sentence. First I will just name the steps. Then I will explain them.
Step 1: Maybe every part of a language (words and other pieces of
syntax) has a meaning (p.92)
Step 2: Not every part of a language (words and other pieces of
syntax) has a meaning. (pp. 92-93)
Step 3: Maybe the meanings of some words are their referents and
you can just figure out how words without relate to the words with referents.
(p.93)
Step 4: This won't work either: because of the slingshot argument.
(p. 96)
Step 5: A bold leap (p. 97)
Step 1: Maybe every part of a language (words and other pieces of
syntax) has a meaning (p.92)
So take a sentence like "Theatetus flies". How do you explain the meaning of the
sentence in terms of its parts? You might
try to say the meaning of "Theatetus" is the person Theatetus, and
the meaning of "flies" is the property of flying.. . .
Step 2: Not every part of a language (words and other pieces of
syntax) has a meaning. (pp. 92-93)
. . .but Davdison says this won't work because it leads to
regress. . . He doesn't really spell this out.
He goes on to give another reason against using this strategy: he thinks
that it is unnecessary to assign a meaning to every word. This is the point of the discussion of “the
father of Annette”. All that is needed
is to figure out how to assign referents to “Annette”, “the father of Annete”,
“the father of the father of Annette” and so on. No part of the strategy involves assigning a meaning or referent
to “the” or “of”.
Step 3: Maybe the meanings of some words are their referents and
you can just figure out how words without relate to the words with referents,
and maybe this will work for whole sentences by assigning referents to entire
sentences. (p.93)
But the problem with this is that , according to the slingshot
argument, every true sentence has the same referent. And if meaning just is reference, then every true sentence means
the same thing.
Step 4 The slingshot argument pp 93-94
The slingshot argument will probably strike you as extremely weird
and extremely hard. The point of the
argument is that the meaning of a sentence cannot be what it refers to because
all true sentences end up referring to the same thing. The way the slingshot leads to the
conclusion that all true sentences refer to the same thing is so difficult to
follow for many students because the conclusion seems so bizarre.
Here is a long quote on the slingshot argument from an article on
the web by E.J. Lowe ("Philosophical Logic" web address:
http://www.dur.ac.uk/~dfl0www/modules/logic/PHILLOG.HTM
BEGIN QUOTE
Facts will only serve as the truth-making
correlates of sentences or propositions if they can be individuated and
identified in a principled way. However, there is an important argument—now
often referred to as the 'slingshot' (Barwise & Perry 1981)—attributed by
Alonzo Church (1956, p. 25) to Frege and subsequently espoused by such philosophers
as Donald Davidson (1969, pp. 41-2) and W. V. Quine, the implication of which
is that facts cannot be non-trivially individuated. The argument purports to
show that if a 'fact' is what a true sentence or proposition 'corresponds' to,
then all true sentences or propositions correspond to the same fact—so either
we should avoid an ontology of facts, or else we have to accept that there is
only one fact, the 'Great Fact'. The latter position, however, is of no use to
a proponent of the correspondence theory of truth, since it entirely
trivializes that theory. The argument (or one version of it) goes as follows.
If facts exist, and a certain sentence, P, is true, then it is surely
undeniable that
(1) The fact that P is identical with the
fact that P.
However, it is surely also the case that
the singular term 'the fact that P' should not change its reference if we
substitute for P another sentence Q which is logically equivalent to P, nor if
we substitute for any singular term in P another singular term with the same
reference. This being so, let Q be any true sentence distinct from P and let a
be any arbitrarily chosen object. Then it is easily provable that P is
logically equivalent to the following sentence: '{a} = {x: x = a & P}'.
(This may be read in English as follows: 'The set whose sole member is a is
identical with the set every member x of which satisfies the condition that x
is identical with a andP is the case'.) Hence, from (1) we can deduce
(2) The fact that P is identical with the
fact that {a} = {x: x = a & P}.
However, in exactly the same way it can be
proved that Q is logically equivalent to '{a} = {x: x = a & Q}'. It follows
that the two singular terms '{x: x = a & P}' and '{x: x = a & Q}' have
the same reference, since both have the same reference as the singular term
'{a}'. Accordingly, we can substitute the second of these terms for the first
in (2) to give
(3) The fact that P is identical with the
fact that {a} = {x: x = a & Q}.
Finally, using the already established
logical equivalence between Q and '{a} = {x: x = a & Q}', we can deduce
from (3)
(4) The fact that P is identical with the
fact that Q.
Thus, starting out from some highly
plausible assumptions and an apparently trivial premise, (1), we have been able
to deduce that any two true sentences, P and Q, correspond to the same fact, if
indeed facts exist. There are various ways in which one might attempt to block
this argument—for instance, by rejecting the assumption that so-called
set-abstracts like '{x: x = a & P}' are genuinely singular referring terms,
or by allowing that the substitution of one singular referring term for another
co-referring one within P may alter the reference of the term 'the fact that
P'. But none of these strategies is particularly compelling.
Frege's own conclusion from this line of
reasoning (to the extent that Church is correct in attributing it to him) was
that, rather than saying that every true sentence corresponds to a fact which
makes it true, we should say that every true sentence has as its reference the
True (and that every false one has as its reference the False). (See Frege
1892b, p. 63.) That is to say, the reference of every (assertoric) sentence is
a truth value, of which there are just two. (The only exceptions to this rule,
for Frege, would be assertoric sentences containing names lacking a reference,
such as 'Zeus': such a sentence, he thought, must itself lack a reference and
hence have no truth value.) Frege did not believe that one could define 'truth',
holding it to be a primitive and irreducible notion. Of course, the idea that a
sentence can have a 'reference' may seem odd, though only if we take names as
our paradigms of expressions having a reference (this, then, is a case in which
the term 'semantic value' may be less misleading than the term 'reference'). It
should be pointed out here that between Frege's extreme of taking all true
sentences to have the same reference and the opposite extreme of taking all
logically non-equivalent true sentences to 'correspond' to different 'facts'
there are many intermediate positions. Consider, thus, the case of negative and
disjunctive true sentences of the forms 'Not P' and 'P or Q', respectively. A
correspondence theorist need not say that 'Not P' is made true by a negative
fact, the fact that not P, nor that 'P or Q' is made true by a disjunctive
fact, the fact that P or Q. He can say that 'Not P' is true because there is no
fact that P for it to correspond to, and he can say that 'P or Q' is either
made true by the fact that P or else made true by the fact that Q. Thus, on
this view, logically non-equivalent true sentences can, but need not, have the
same 'truth-makers'.
END QUOTE
Step 5: A bold leap (p. 97)
This is pretty much contained in the second full paragraph on p
97.