Analytic Philosophy

All About Carnap's Babylon

Naomi Osorio Kupferblum 1, 2
2
 
Department of Analytic Philosophy, Institute of Philosophy Slovak Academy of Sciences Bratislava Slovakia
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2024-12-29
scimago Q1
SJR0.428
CiteScore1.1
Impact factor0.6
ISSN21539596, 2153960X
Abstract
ABSTRACT

Carnap's Logical Syntax of Language (1937) contains an unfortunate passage, the ‘Babylon passage’, explaining what it is for a linguistic expression to be about a subject matter. Past criticism has only addressed Carnap's mistaken claim that the occurrence of a denoting term is necessary and sufficient for a linguistic expression to be about the denotatum. But the passage contains further problems: a form‐object confusion due to the ambiguity of ‘lecture’; a use‐mention problem with the word ‘Babylon’; and finally, the fact that its key sentence 𝔖1 is a counterexample to Carnap's own definition of aboutness. These flaws notwithstanding, the passage's ‘non‐formal consideration’ that a statement's truth or falsity should matter to our knowledge about the subject matter's properties, is an important contribution to aboutness theory. This paper discusses all these pros and cons of the passage in depth with a view to their consequences for current work on subject matter.

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