Abstract
This article discusses the “Argument from Inference” raised against the view that definite descriptions are semantically referring expressions. According to this argument, the indicated view is inadequate since it evaluates some invalid inferences with definite descriptions as “valid” and vice versa. I argue that the Argument from Inference is basically wrong. Firstly, it is crucially based on the assumption that a proponent of the view that definite descriptions are referring expressions conceives them as directly referring terms, i.e., the terms which contribute their referents into the semantic content of the sentences in which they occur. However, the framework of direct reference is not essential to the idea that descriptions might have semantic referential interpretation. Secondly, the Argument of Inference - if correct - suffices to establish an overgeneralized conclusion that even paradigmatically referring terms, like proper names, cannot be semantically referential. This fact indicates that the argument is flawed. In the final part of this article, I briefly consider what the source of the problem with the Argument of Inference might be.
Highlights
This article discusses the “Argument from Inference” raised against the view that definite descriptions are semantically referring expressions
An adequate semantic theory of definite descriptions should provide a correct evaluation of inferences containing sentences with definite descriptions
What Zouhar should consider is the following way of specifying the truth conditions of utterances with referentially used descriptions: (R*) An utterance of ‘The F is G’ is true relative to context C iff the object that the utterer of ‘The F’ has in mind in C ∈ G. (MR*) An utterance of ‘The F is G’ is true relative to context C iff the object that the utterer of ‘The F’ has in mind in C ∈ G and it ∈ F. Observe that when it comes to conducting a test in order to check whether the theory based on (R*) and (MR*) can distinguish valid inferences from the invalid ones, we should firstly consider a particular context of use, since it is the context which helps us determine the proposition which is expressed by a referential utterance
Summary
This article discusses the “Argument from Inference” raised against the view that definite descriptions are semantically referring expressions. The Argument from Inference targets the direct-reference approach to the semantics of referentially used descriptions.
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