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Single Idea 2763

[from 'Intro to Contemporary Epistemology' by Jonathan Dancy, in 19. Language / F. Communication / 6. Interpreting Language / b. Indeterminate translation ]

Full Idea

Indeterminacy stems from an interplay between belief and meaning, as with a man who tells you he keeps two rhinoceri in the fridge and squeezes the juice of one for a drink each morning.

Gist of Idea

There is an indeterminacy in juggling apparent meanings against probable beliefs

Source

Jonathan Dancy (Intro to Contemporary Epistemology [1985], 7.4)

Book Reference

Dancy,Jonathan: 'Introduction to Contemporary Epistemology' [Blackwell 1985], p.107


A Reaction

I don't understand why an 'interplay' is called an 'indeterminacy'. Typical philosophers. Close examination will usually show whether the change is just in belief, or just in meaning, or in both.