Does language have a downtown? Wittgenstein, Brandom, and the game of “giving and asking for reasons”

  • Pietro Salis University of Cagliari, Italy
Keywords: Discursive Practice, Inferentialism, Language Games, Pluralism, Rule Following

Abstract

Wittgenstein’s Investigations proposed an egalitarian view about language games, emphasizing their plurality (“language has no downtown”). Uses of words depend on the game one is playing, and may change when playing another. Furthermore, there is no privileged game dictating the rules for the others: games are as many as purposes. This view is pluralist and egalitarian, but it says little about the connection between meaning and use, and about how a set of rules is responsible for them in practice.

Brandom’s Making It Explicit attempted a straightforward answer to these questions, by developing Wittgensteinian insights: the primacy of social practice over meanings; the idea that meaning is use; the idea of rule–following to understand participation in social practices. Nonetheless, Brandom defended a non–Wittgensteinian conception of discursive practice: language has a “downtown”, the game of “giving and asking for reasons”. This is the idea of a normative structure of language, consisting of advancing claims and drawing inferences. By means of assertions, speakers undertake “commitments” that can be challenged/defended in terms of reasons (those successfully justified can gain “entitlement”). This game is not one among many: it is indispensable to the very idea of discursive practice.

In this paper, my aim will be that of exploring the main motivations and implications of both perspectives.

Author Biography

Pietro Salis, University of Cagliari, Italy

Pietro Salis is a post–doc researcher at the University of Cagliari. His main research interests deal with philosophy of language, philosophy of mind, and epistemology. His main writings are about inferentialist theories of conceptual content, justificationism about meaning, and enactive approaches to mind and cognition. His more recent publications include Counterfactually robust inferences, modally ruled out inferences, and semantic holism (Al–Mukhatabat Journal 16, 2015), (with F. Ervas et al.); Expertise and metaphor in health communication (Medicina & Storia 9–10, 2016) and the book Pratiche discorsive razionali. Studi sull’inferenzialismo di Robert Brandom (Milano–Udine: Mimesis, 2016). He also co–edited the books Realtà, Verità, Rappresentazione (Milano: FrancoAngeli, 2015); Verità, Immagine, Normatività (Macerata: Quodlibet, 2017); and Mind, collective agency, norms (Aachen: Shaker, 2017).

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Published
2019-06-30
How to Cite
[1]
Salis, P. 2019. Does language have a downtown? Wittgenstein, Brandom, and the game of “giving and asking for reasons”. Disputatio. 8, 9 (Jun. 2019), 499-520. DOI:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3236918.