In:The Pragmatics of Making it Explicit
Edited by Pirmin Stekeler-Weithofer
[Benjamins Current Topics 15] 2008
► pp. 163–185
Keeping track of individuals: Brandom's analysis of Kripke's puzzle and the content of belief
Published online: 29 October 2008
https://doi.org/10.1075/bct.15.12pen
https://doi.org/10.1075/bct.15.12pen
This paper gives attention to a special point in Brandom’s Making it Explicit. Brandom proposes in MIE a “Fregean” way out of Kripke’s puzzle about belief. In the first part, I analyze two main features of Brandom’s strategy, the definition of anaphoric chains as senses of proper names and the implausibility of the application of a disquotational principle to proper names. In the second part, I discuss (i) the problem of the stability of contents and (ii) the problem of sharing contents. I claim that Brandom’s strong holism leads to irresolvable difficulties with respect to the concept of conceptual content as it emerges from the discussion of Kripke’s puzzle.
Keywords: anaphora, belief, context, disquotational principle, holism, idiolect, indexical, opacity, pronoun, translation
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