hidden pixel

Contrastivism Information

Contrastivism is an epistemological theory proposed by Jonathan Schaffer that suggests that knowledge attributions have a ternary structure of the form 'S knows that p rather than q'. This is in contrast to the traditional view whereby knowledge attributions have a binary structure of the form 'S knows that p'. Contrastivism was suggested as an alternative to contextualism. Both are semantic theories that try to explain skepticism using semantic methods.

The Contrast Clause

The '...rather than q' part of the knowledge attribution is known as the 'contrast clause'. This is what separates it from traditional binary formulations. Rather than taking the same road as contextualism and saying that the meaning of 'knows' can change with attributor context the contrastivist claims that it is the unspoken contrast clause that changes. This can be used to avoid skeptical problems.

References and Further Reading

· · Philosophy of language
Related articles: Analytic philosophyLanguagePhilosophy of informationPhilosophical logicLinguisticsPragmaticsRhetoricSemanticsFormal semanticsSemiotics
Concepts in language

AmbiguityLinguistic relativityMeaningLanguageTruthbearerPropositionUse–mention distinctionConceptCategoriesSetClassIntensionLogical formMetalanguageMental representationPrinciple of compositionalityPropertySignSense and referenceSpeech actSymbolEntitySentenceStatementmore...

Theories of language

Causal theory of referenceContrast theory of meaningContrastivismConventionalismCratylismDeconstructionDescriptivist theory of namesDirect reference theoryDramatismExpressivismLinguistic determinismLogical atomismLogical positivismMediated reference theoryNominalismNon-cognitivismPhallogocentrismQuietismRelevance theorySemantic externalismSemantic holismStructuralismSupposition theorySymbiosismTheological noncognitivismTheory of descriptionsVerification theory

Philosophers of language

Plato (Cratylus) • ConfuciusXun ZiAristotleStoicsPyrrhonistsScholasticismIbn RushdIbn KhaldunThomas HobbesGottfried LeibnizJohann HerderWilhelm von HumboldtFritz MauthnerPaul RicœurFerdinand de SaussureGottlob FregeFranz BoasPaul TillichEdward SapirLeonard BloomfieldZhuangziHenri BergsonLudwig Wittgenstein (Philosophical InvestigationsTractatus Logico-Philosophicus)Bertrand RussellRudolf CarnapJacques Derrida (Of GrammatologyLimited Inc)Benjamin Lee WhorfGustav BergmannJ. L. AustinNoam ChomskyHans-Georg GadamerSaul KripkeAlfred Jules AyerDonald DavidsonPaul GriceGilbert RyleP. F. Strawson

Category · Task Force · Discussion · Changes
This article about epistemology is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. · ·

Categories: Theories of language | Epistemological theories | Skepticism |

 

The above information uses material from Wikipedia and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Some facts may not have been fully verified for accuracy. [Disclaimers]
This page was last archived by our server on Sun Nov 20 16:19:23 2011.
Displaying this page or its contents does not use any Wikimedia Foundation's resources.
The owners of this site proudly support the Wikimedia Foundation.