Abstract

My overall aim is to show that there is a serious and compelling argument in Stanley Cavell’s work for why any philosophical theorizing that fails to recognize what Cavell refers to as “our common world of background” as a condition for the sense of anything we say or do, and to acknowledge its own dependence on that background and the vulnerability implied by that dependence, runs the risk of rendering itself, thereby, ultimately unintelligible. I begin with a characterization of Cavell’s unique way of inheriting Austin and Wittgenstein – I call it “ordinary language philosophy existentialism” – as it relates to what Cavell calls “skepticism”. I then turn to Cavell’s response to Kripke in “The Argument of the Ordinary”, which is different from all other responses to Kripke’s Wittgenstein on Rules and Private Language in that Cavell’s response, while theoretically powerful, is at the same time also existentialist, in the sense that Cavell finds a way of acknowledging in his writing the fundamental fact that his writing (thinking) constitutes an instance of what he is writing (thinking) about. This unique achievement of Cavell’s response to Kripke is not additional to his argument, but essential to it: it enables him not merely to say, but to show that, and how, Kripke’s account falsifies what it purports to elucidate, and thereby to show that the theoretical question of linguistic sense is not truly separable, not even theoretically, from the broadly ethical question of how we relate to others, and how we conduct ourselves in relation to them from one moment to the next.

Highlights

  • My overall aim is to show that there is a serious and compelling argument in Stanley Cavell’s work for why any philosophical theorizing that fails to recognize what Cavell refers to as “our common world of background” as a condition for the sense of anything we say or do, and to acknowledge its own dependence on that background and the vulnerability implied by that dependence, runs the risk of rendering itself, thereby, unintelligible

  • I consider the voice of Stanley Cavell, who passed away this past June at the age of ninety-one, to be the most important Englishspeaking philosophical voice of the second half of the twentieth century, where by “important philosophical voice” I mean: a voice that young students of philosophy nowadays need to hear

  • The aim of this paper is to show that there is, a serious and powerful argument to be found in Cavell’s work for why any philosophical theorizing that fails to recognize what Cavell refers to as “our common world of background” as a condition for the sense of anything we say or do, and to acknowledge its own dependence on that background and the vulnerability implied by that dependence, runs the risk of rendering itself, thereby, unintelligible

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Summary

Stage-Setting

Though my focus will be on “The Argument of the Ordinary”, I want to set the stage with a passage from a much earlier work of Cavell’s.4 It was written after Cavell, who was, as he reports, “on the road toward a proper dissertation (on the concept of human action)”, attended a set of lectures given at Harvard in 1955 by J. Ordinary language philosophy is called for when a stretch of philosophical speech – be it the philosopher’s own or one of the philosopher’s protagonists’ – strikes you as making no clear sense, or anyway no sense that would serve the philosopher’s professed aims and commitments, and as relying for its apparent sense “[...] I have read Wittgenstein’s portrait of skepticism, as the site in which we abdicate such responsibility as we have over words, unleashing them from our criteria, as if toward the world – unleashing our voices from them – coming to feel that our criteria limit rather than constitute our access to the world” (Cavell 1990, 22) This seems to me a very fine gloss on one of the central and most basic insights of Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason, with an ethical-existential inflection that is at most only implicitly present in Kant.

Kripke’s Picture
The Argument of the Ordinary I
The Argument of the Ordinary II
Findings
The Argument of the Ordinary III
Full Text
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