Normativity: A Matter of Keeping Score or of Policing?

  • Bernhard Weiss University of Cape Town, South Africa
Keywords: Normativity, Discursive, Assertion, Content

Abstract

Both Brandom and Wittgenstein see meaning and content as emerging from normative social practices. Wittgenstein says little about the constitution of such norms, other than that they are exhibited in practitioners’ judgements of correctness. In addition, they appear already to be content involving, since the moves whose correctness is in question are moves such as asserting that such and such. In contrast, Brandom says a good deal about the constitution of the norms and promises a reductive programme. The norms are essentially inferential and are instituted in the social practice of attributing commitments and entitlements. In particular, we are urged to see the norm-bound move of assertion as capable of being understood in terms of the normative statuses of commitments and entitlements. Jeremy Wanderer calls this Brandom’s bold conjecture. In this paper I use Wittgenstein’s thinking about normativity to reflect on the defensibility of Brandom’s bold conjecture.

Author Biography

Bernhard Weiss, University of Cape Town, South Africa

Bernhard Weiss is currently Professor and Head of the Philosophy Department at the University of Cape Town. He specialises in Philosophies of language, logic and mathematics, realism and anti-realism He has written two books, Michael Dummett (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2002) and How to Understand Language (Durham: Acumen Publishing, 2010) and numerous papers, predominantly in the philosophy of language. He has coedited together with Jeremy Wanderer Reading Brandom on Making it Explicit (Abingdon: Routledge, 2010).

References

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MacFarlane, John (2010). “Pragmatism and Inferentialism” pp. 81-95. In Reading Brandom: On Making it Explicit, edited by Jeremy Wanderer and Bernhard Weiss. Abingdon: Routledge.

Wanderer, Jeremy (2008). Robert Brandom. Stocksfield: Acumen.

Weiss, Bernhard (2010). “Rules and Talking about Rules.” International Journal of Philosophical Studies 18, no. 2: pp. 229–241. https://doi.org/10.1080/09672551003677861

Weiss, Bernhard (2018). “Let’s Admit Defeat: Assertion, Denial, and Retraction” pp. 97–112. In From Rules to Meanings: New Essays on Inferentialism, edited by Ondřej Beran, Vojtěch Kolman, Ladislav Koreň. Abingdon: Routledge.

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Published
2019-06-30
How to Cite
[1]
Weiss, B. 2019. Normativity: A Matter of Keeping Score or of Policing?. Disputatio. 8, 9 (Jun. 2019), 223-236. DOI:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.2644656.