[Distributed in North and South America by Transaction Books],
2010.
1 online resource (132 pages).
Aporia ;
Bd. 2
Includes bibliographical references and index.
I. Rules, Norms and Conventions; 1. Why norms are not conventions and conventions are not norms; 1.1 The tension of normativity; 1.2 Two concepts of arbitrariness: Saussure and Lewis; 1.3 Can conventions become norms?; 1.4 Rules; 2. Cavell on normative necessity: The philosopher, the baker, and the pantomime of caution; 2.1 "I am less interested now in the "mean" than I am in the "must""; 2.2 "Here the pantomime of caution concludes"; 2.3 "...the hopelessness of speaking, in a general way, about the "normativeness" of expressions"
4.4 The two kinds of normativity4.5 The unpacking of 'ought'18; 4.6 Normativity without norms; 5. Searle on rules (of rationality, conversation and speech acts); 5.1 The shortcut argument against rule; 5.2 Is language a rule governed form of behavior or is it not?; 5.3 (No) Rules of conversation; 5.4 Background brought to the foreground; Conclusion
II. Rules as conventions vs. rules as norms in the rule-following debates3. What is a rule and what ought it to be; 3.1 The reduction of rules to conventions vs. the reduction of rules to norms; 3.2 Kripke: The reduction of rules to conventions1; 3.3 Baker and Hacker: The reduction of rules to norms; 3.4 Meredith Williams on normative necessity; 3.5 Cora Diamond: Rules and their right place; III. Twisted Language; 4. Davidson on rules, conventions and norms; 4.1. Normativity without conventionality; 4.2 Communication without rules or conventions; 4.3 "The second person" vs. the community view
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"The Rei(g)n of 'Rule' is a study of rules and their role in language. Rules have dominated the philosophical arena as a fundamental philosophical concept. Little progress, however, has been made in reaching an accepted definition of rules. This fact is not coincidental. The concept of rule is expected to perform various, and at times conflicting tasks. By analyzing key debates and rule-related discussions in the philosophy of language, the author shows that typically rules are perceived and defined either as norms or as conventions. The impossibility to consistently define "rule" has gone unnoticed by philosophers, and it is in this sense that "rule" has also blocked philosophical attempts to explain language in terms of rules."--Publisher's website.