
Contents
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I. The Intensional Language L 1 I. The Intensional Language L 1
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II. The Extensional Transform L E II. The Extensional Transform L E
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III. The Parsons Transform L P III. The Parsons Transform L P
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IV. The Problem IV. The Problem
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V. Bad Rejoinders V. Bad Rejoinders
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VI. Common Ground VI. Common Ground
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VII. Morals VII. Morals
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Cite
Abstract
In this paper, Lewis introduces a problem that he cannot solve. He begins by describing, in general outline, two idealized languages: one richly intensional, the other purely extensional. The problem arises when we imagine two field linguists – one an intensionalist (like Lewis), the other an extensionalist – faced with the task of interpreting a tribe that speaks a previously unknown language. When the intensionalist interprets the tribesmen as using an intensional language, the extensionalist disagrees, claiming it “gratuitous of [the intensionalist] to ascribe to them a language that requires the notoriously obscure apparatus of intensional semantics.” Lewis dismisses several unsatisfactory rejoinders to this challenge and concludes by drawing several morals from the unresolved dialectical situation.
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