
Contents
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8.1 The explanatory challenge 8.1 The explanatory challenge
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8.2 The Quantification Question 8.2 The Quantification Question
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McGee’s strategy McGee’s strategy
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Community Q: syntax Community Q: syntax
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Semantic assumptions Semantic assumptions
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Patterns of use Patterns of use
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Community Q: use Community Q: use
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A metasemantic assumption A metasemantic assumption
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An answer to the Quantification Question An answer to the Quantification Question
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8.3 Assumptions 8.3 Assumptions
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Semantic assumptions Semantic assumptions
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The metasemantic assumption The metasemantic assumption
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8.4 The Expansion Question 8.4 The Expansion Question
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Community E: syntax Community E: syntax
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Semantic assumptions Semantic assumptions
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Trans-language patterns of use Trans-language patterns of use
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Community E: use Community E: use
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A metasemantic assumption A metasemantic assumption
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An answer to the Expansion Question An answer to the Expansion Question
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8.5 Idealization 8.5 Idealization
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Community E⋆ Community E⋆
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Accommodation Accommodation
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8.6 Closing summary 8.6 Closing summary
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Cite
Abstract
Advocates of an expansionist version of relativism face an important explanatory challenge: how might we cause the universe of discourse to expand? To make progress with this question, it’s helpful to begin with another: how might a quantifierless linguistic community come to quantify? On the basis of some standard semantic assumptions and a metasemantic assumption about how use determines meaning, this chapter offers an idealized answer to both questions. It is further argued that natural patterns of use may cause a linguistic community’s universe to repeatedly expand. The chapter closes with a summary of the defence of relativism given in the rest of the book.
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