Reference Magnetism

Suppose

1) the facts about use etc. underdetermine the semantic value of term x (to a certain degree).

But

2) the semantic value of x is not underdetermined (to that degree).

Let V1,V2,... be the semantic values between which x is underdetermined, and suppose V2 is in fact the value (or range of values) of x. What is it about V2 that makes it the semantic value? Not 'use etc'. But suppose all obvious candidates like causal facts are part of 'use etc.'. Then the relationship between x and V2 -- let's call it "reference" -- is inscrutable insofar as knowing all ordinary facts about use and causation and so on is not enough to find out that x refers to V2. There must be something over and above all this that privileges V2. Let's say (with Lewis) that V2 is a reference magnet (with respect to x).

The doctrine of reference magnetism comes in different degrees.

Weak magnetism holds that if conditions (1) and (2) obtain, the reference of x is the most magnetic candidate compatible with the facts about use etc.

Intermediate magnetism holds that the reference of x is the value that strikes the best balance between satisfying the facts about use etc. and being magnetic. That is, if V' is not among the original values V1,V2,... (determined by the facts about use etc.), it may still be the value of x, if it is more magnetic than any of the V1,V2,....

Strong magnetism holds that being magnetic always trumps use etc.: if V' is the most magnetic entity with respect to x, then x refers to V', no matter the facts about use etc. Only if several candidates are equally magnetic with respect to x do facts about use etc. enter into the picture, selecting among the most magnetic values the one that best fits those facts.

A classical form of magnetism is the epistemic theory of vagueness on which e.g. "bald" denotes some precise property even though facts about use etc. will not tell us what property that is. Essentialism can also be understood as a form of magnetism, on which the intension of, say, "Kripke" is not determined by facts about our use etc. of "Kripke", but by an intension-magnet called "Kripke's essence". (Look at it in terms of the lump theory: What fusion of counterparts "Kripke" denotes is determined by Kripke's essence.)

A less precise kind of magnetism is assumed by Kripke and Stalnaker when they say that reference is not analyzable in terms of use etc. Yet another kind of magnetism is suggested by Lewis when he argues that objective naturalness of semantic values can solve the indeterminay problem for Global Descriptivism. (Presumably some further kind of magnetism is accepted by Lewis, though it's hard to say from his writings just what this magnetism amounts to.)

Finally, Brian Weatherson and Ted Sider appeal to magnetism in order to show how people can mean the very same thing by x even if they differ in their use of x. Notice that weak magnetism is not enough here: being magnetic must be able to trump facts about use etc.

The main problem I have with magnetism is that it conflicts with what I think we do with language. Suppose the colour red is a very magnetic property, so that all colour predicates end up denoting redness. Then how can I use "that book is blue" to communicate that the book is blue? What sense does it make to say that I really communicate that the book is red if that isn't reflected by our usage, by the beliefs I express, by the beliefs you acquire, by your subsequent behaviour, by the conditions under which we criticise such utterances, and so on?

I also haven't yet seen a convincing argument that magnetism is really needed. The usual argument proceed via (1) and (2). But do (1) and (2) ever obtain if all relevant facts about use etc. are taken into account? What exactly is wrong about leaving semantic values indeterminate if those facts don't suffice to settle them? More importantly, even if (1) and (2) sometimes obtain, they only support weak magnetism. Some rather different argument is needed to support stronger versions, but I'm not aware of any such arguments.

Note that I do not reject objective naturalness or individual essences. Accepting them allows me to offer a nice replacement for magnetism for cases where it looks attractive. For instance, by using natural kind terms we mean to communicate information about more or less natural classes. This is reflected by our usage, by the beliefs we express and acquire, by our behaviour, etc. So the facts about use etc. determine that the referent of, say, "tiger" is a class of things satisfying (to a sufficient degree) conditions like: containing animals; containing things we've heard of under the name "tiger"; ...; and being objectively natural. Here naturalness is not needed as an additional constraint on reference, over and above facts about use etc. Similarly, one could say that facts about usage etc. determine that we mean "Kripke" to denote at every possible world an entity that shares Kripke's essence.

Comments

# on 18 November 2004, 00:10

Do you think that Lewis wouldn't extend the 'objective naturalness of semantic values' strategy to his own convention-based account? I thought that in 'Meaning without use' he pretty much endorses exactly this strategy. And that article is explicitly about his own convention-based approach, not global descriptivism. There he says "use determines some meanings, those meanings determines the rules, and the rules determine the rest of the meanings." (p.149). The 'rules' he's talking about here have got to be the assignment of subsentential semantic values (a grammar, in his sense).

What underpins the extrapolation from a limited range of conventions to a grammar? He puts a footnote to New Work for a Theory of Universals.

The only good interpretation of the article that I can think of is to think that Lewis is again saying that what makes a grammar right (makes the extrapolation to it good) is a combination of eligibility + meeting constraints of fit. And this is exactly analogously to the Lewis suggestion in the case of global descriptivism.

# on 18 November 2004, 18:04

I agree that Lewis defends a kind of naturalness + fit account of meaning. But firstly, Lewis here (in MWU) only talks about 'straight' versus 'bent' compositional rules for constructing the semantic value of complex sentences from the values of their parts. It isn't clear that he also endorses the naturalness constraint for, say, the semantic values of predicates. Secondly, in "Putnam's Paradox", the magnetism Lewis suggests is clearly what I've called 'intermediate magnetiscm'. The magnetism suggested in MWU seems weaker (fit mostly trumps naturalness), though not perfectly weak.

# on 22 November 2004, 15:50

hey,

a couple quick questions,

(1) I wonder about your gloss of epistemicism. Isn't our ignorance about the reference of vague terms on an epistemicist view often a matter of ignorance of the (very detailed) facts about use (etc) that are relevant to determining their reference. This is what I took semantic plasticity to involve - the reference of vague terms is so senstive to tiny variations in use (etc) that we can never be in a position to know what they actually refer to (in full). But prehaps I'm just confused here.

(2) I also wonder about the degree to which the strategy you propose is really an alternative to full-fledge semantic magneticism. Why can't the use plus eligibility semanticist just say (following your line) that by using terms (of all kinds) we mean to communicate information about more or less natural classes or entities. And that this is reflected by our usage, by the beliefs we express and acquire, by our behaviour, etc - namely those patterns of usage that are constitutive of language use in general or as such. I.e. why shouldn't the defender of a "magnetic" account appeal to a prefectly general preference ("in use") for more eligible properties to respond to your complaints. (Of course, this preference would have to be somewhat defeasible, etc)

(3) In a related note, it seems to me somewhat unfair to suggest that your account doesn't require an appeal to facts over and above facts about use in the sense relevant to the debate here. After all, as I just noted, the question of whether or not a given constraint is "encoded within our usage" is often not very substantive. The more substantive issue is whether in doing semantics we must appeal to notions of naturalness or eligibility at all - and here you seem to agree with the eligibility semanticist...

anyway, great stuff as always,
karl

# on 24 November 2004, 13:54

Hi Karl, thanks for the comments!

I agree that the distinction between a) regarding naturalness as a further constraint over and above use etc. and b) regarding naturalness as a constraint determined by the use etc. of certain expressions is subtle, and not very substantive. Still I think there is a difference, albeit a vague one. It mostly depends on what one regards as the relevant facts about 'use etc.'.

Perhaps the difference is easiest to see on a simple kind of descriptivism (which I think is largely correct): suppose a term "T" denotes whatever best satisfies the "T"-beliefs of competent speakers (the 'folk theory of T'). These beliefs determine a set of constraints, like: Ts are animals, Ts are dangerous, Ts live in Africa, etc. On my suggestion, for some terms, this set will also contain something like "the Ts comprise a natural kind". But not for all terms. (And even if naturalness were part of any folk theory of T, that would be a strange coincidence, as if dangerousness were part of any folk theory of T.)

By contrast, what I call magnetism says that naturalness is an external, additional constraint, independent of what competent speakers believe. On this view, it might happen that "T" denotes x even though something else, y, better satisfies the folk theory of T. For example, "knowledge" may denote justified true belief even if something else better satisfies our beliefs ('intuitions') about knowledge. This is what I want to reject.

Re epistemicism, you're completely right and it is me who was confused.

# on 08 December 2004, 20:38

Here's two interesting quotes by Lewis, hopefully related to this discussion.

In ?Reduction of Mind?, Lewis writes, ?If there is variation across worlds with respect to which states occupy the folk-psychological roles? then also there can be variation within a single world. For possibility obeys a principle of recombination?? (1994 in 1999: 305).

And in ?How to Define Theoretical Terms?, where Lewis seems to be talking about terms from fundamental sciences, he claims, ?T-terms purporting to name properties will normally turn out to be logically indeterminate names of properties? (1970: 436) In other words, T-terms do not have the same reference across worlds. (See also ?Ramseyan Humility?.)

Given that Lewis accepts a functional semantics across the board, we can conclude that the extension of a fundamental theoretical term in a single world can also consist of a non-homogeneous class (this does not require a change in the laws of nature, because we can recombine ?occupiers? without changing any ?structure?). But that seems unacceptable. So it must after all be part of our theory that we intend to refer to things or classes satisfying naturalness constraints.

This is where it gets messy. Because in addition to including ??and it satisfies naturalness constraints?? in our descriptions, there are these external naturalness constraints. (And the former terms might not even refer to the latter phenomena!) Couldn't we have decided to keep using 'jade' the way we did, even when we noticed that 'jade' didn't have an homogeneous class as its extension?

I do agree with Wo that it would be nice if we could avoid Lewis?s external constraints. I think that this is possible by grounding reference ultimately in experience. Contra Putnam, there is no complete freedom in assigning referents to terms (except for our intention to come out mostly true). For instance, the referent of ?pain sensation? is fixed.

That terms like ?red sensation? are special can be seen by noticing that they are rigid in a very strong sense. ?Red sensation? seems to refer to the same type of sensation across possible worlds, even regardless of the world of utterance. (Names are not rigid this way; ?Hesperus? expresses a constant intension from possible worlds to referents, but this intension depends upon the world of utterance.)

I?ll stop typing here, before I start sounding too crazy.

- Brandt

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