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    Davidson: Philosophy of Language

    Donald Davidson (1917-2003) was one of the most influential analytic philosophers of  

    language during the second half of the twentieth century and the first decade of the 

    twenty-first century. An attraction of Davidson’s philosophy of language is the set of  

    conceptual connections he draws between traditional questions about language and issues that arise in other fields of philosophy, including especially the philosophy of  

    mind, action theory, epistemology, and metaphysics. This article addresses only his 

     work on the   philosophy of language  , but one should bear in mind that this work is 

    properly understood as part of a larger philosophical endeavor.

    It is useful to think of Davidson’s project in the philosophy of language as cleaving into 

    two parts. The first, which commences with his earliest publications in the field 

    (Davidson 1965 and 1967), explores and defends his claim that a   Tarski-style theory of  

    truth   for a language L, modified and supplemented in important ways, suffices to 

    explain how the meanings of the sentences of a language L depend upon the meanings 

    of words of L, and thus models a significant part of the knowledge someone possesses 

    http://www.iep.utm.edu/truth/#H4http://www.iep.utm.edu/truth/#H4http://www.iep.utm.edu/lang-phi/http://www.iep.utm.edu/davidson/

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     when she understands L. In other words, Davidson claims that we can adapt a 

    Tarski-style theory of truth to do duty for   a theory of meaning  . This claim, which is 

    stronger and more complex than it appears at first reading, is examined in section 1.

    The second part of Davidson’s work on language (in articles beginning with Davidson 

    1973 and 1974) addresses issues associated with constructing the sort of meaning theory  

    he proposes in the first part of his project. A Davidsonian theory of meaning is an 

    empirical theory that one constructs to interpret─that is, to describe, systematize, and 

    explain─the linguistic behavior of speakers one encounters in the field or, simply, in 

    line at the supermarket. Again, this problem turns out to be more complex and more 

    interesting than it first appears. This set of issues is examined in section 2.

    Table of Contents

    1.   Davidson’s Theory of Meaning

    a.   Constraints on a Theory of Meaning

    i.   Compositionality

    ii.  No Meaning Entities

     b.   Theories of Truth as Theories of Meaning

    c.   Meaning and Truthd.   Formal and Natural Languages

    i.   Indexicals

    ii.   Indirect Discourse

    2.   Davidson’s Theory of Interpretation

    a.   Radical Translation

     b.  Radical Interpretation

    i.   Principles of Charity: Coherence

    ii.   Principles of Charity: Correspondence

    c.   Language without Conventions

    d.   Indeterminacy of Interpretation

    e.   Meaning and Interpretation

    3.   References and Further Reading

    a.   Anthologies of Davidson’s Writings

     b.   Individual Articles by Davidson

    http://www.iep.utm.edu/dav-lang/#SH3bhttp://www.iep.utm.edu/dav-lang/#SH3ahttp://www.iep.utm.edu/dav-lang/#H3http://www.iep.utm.edu/dav-lang/#SH2ehttp://www.iep.utm.edu/dav-lang/#SH2dhttp://www.iep.utm.edu/dav-lang/#SH2chttp://www.iep.utm.edu/dav-lang/#SSH2biihttp://www.iep.utm.edu/dav-lang/#SSH2bihttp://www.iep.utm.edu/dav-lang/#SH2bhttp://www.iep.utm.edu/dav-lang/#SH2ahttp://www.iep.utm.edu/dav-lang/#H2http://www.iep.utm.edu/dav-lang/#SSH1diihttp://www.iep.utm.edu/dav-lang/#SSH1dihttp://www.iep.utm.edu/dav-lang/#SH1dhttp://www.iep.utm.edu/dav-lang/#SH1chttp://www.iep.utm.edu/dav-lang/#SH1bhttp://www.iep.utm.edu/dav-lang/#SSH1aiihttp://www.iep.utm.edu/dav-lang/#SSH1aihttp://www.iep.utm.edu/dav-lang/#SH1ahttp://www.iep.utm.edu/dav-lang/#H1

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    c.   Primary Works by other Authors

    d.   Secondary Sources

    i.   Anthologies

    ii.   Critical Discussions of Davidson’s Philosophy

    1. Davidson’s Theory of Meaning

    Davidson takes the notion of a   theory of meaning as central, so it is important to be 

    clear at the outset what he means by the term. Starting with what he does  not mean, it is 

    no part of his project to define the concept of   meaning in the sense in which Socrates 

    asks Euthyphro to define   piety. Davidson writes that it is folly to try to define the 

    concept of   truth (Davidson, 1996), and the same holds for the closely related concept of  

    meaning: both belong to a cluster of concepts so elementary that we should not expect 

    there to be simpler or more basic concepts in terms of which they could be definitionally  

    reduced. Nor does Davidson ask about meaning in such a way that we would expect his 

    answer to take the form,

    the meanings of a speaker’s words are such-and-suches.

    Locke, who says that meanings of a speaker’s words are ideas in her mind, has a theory  

    of meaning in this sense, as do contemporary philosophers of language who identify  

    meanings with the contents of certain beliefs or intentions of the speaker.

    Davidson, therefore, pursues neither a theory of what meaning is nor a theory of what 

    meanings are. Rather, for Davidson a theory of meaning is a descriptive semantics that 

    shows how to pair a speaker’s statements with their meanings, and it does this by  

    displaying how semantical properties or values are distributed systematically over the expressions of her language; in short, it shows how to construct the meanings of a 

    speaker’s sentences out of the meanings of their parts and how those parts are 

    assembled. As a first approximation, one can think of a Davidsonian theory of meaning 

    for the language L as a set of axioms that assign meanings to the lexical elements of the 

    http://www.iep.utm.edu/dav-lang/#SSH3diihttp://www.iep.utm.edu/dav-lang/#SSH3dihttp://www.iep.utm.edu/dav-lang/#SH3dhttp://www.iep.utm.edu/dav-lang/#SH3c

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    language and which, together with rules for constructing complex expressions of L, 

    imply theorems of the form,

    (M)  S  means m,

    for each sentence   S  of the language and   m its meaning. If an observer of   A ’s linguistic 

     behavior has such an “M-theorem” for each of his sentences, then she can explain and 

    even make predictions about   S 's behavior; conversely, we can think of the M-theorems 

    as expressing a body of linguistic knowledge that   A possesses and which underwrites his 

    linguistic competence.

    a. Constraints on a Theory of Meaning

    Much of the interest and originality of Davidson’s work on theories of meaning comes 

    from his choice of Tarski-style theories of truth to serve as the model for theories of  

    meaning. This choice is not obvious, though as early as 1935 Quine remarks that “in 

    point of   meaning… a word may be said to be determined to whatever extent the truth or 

    falsehood of its contexts is determined” (Quine 1935, p. 89); it is not obvious since 

    meaning is a richer concept than truth, for example, “snow is white” and “grass is green” agree in both being true, but they differ in meaning. As Davidson sees the matter, 

    though, only   theories of truth  satisfy certain reasonable constraints on an adequate 

    theory of meaning.

    i. Compositionality

    The first of these constraints is that a theory of meaning should be   compositional . The 

    motivation here is the observation that speakers are finitely endowed creatures, yet they  

    can understand indefinitely many sentences; for example, you never before heard or 

    read the first sentence of this article, but, presumably, you had no difficulty  

    understanding it. To explain this phenomenon, Davidson reasons that language must 

    http://www.iep.utm.edu/lang-phi/#SH4a

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    possess some sort of   recursive structure . (A structure is   recursive if it is built up by  

    repeatedly applying one of a set of procedures to a result of having applied one of those 

    procedures, starting from one or more base elements.) For unless we can treat the 

    meaning of every sentence of a language L as the result of a speaker’s or interpreter’s 

    performing a finite number of operations on a finite (though extendable) semantical 

     base, L will be unlearnable and uninterpretable: no matter how many sentences I 

    master, there will always be others I do not understand. Conversely, if the meaning of  

    each sentence is a product of the meanings of its parts together with the ways those 

    parts are combined, then we can see “how an infinite aptitude can be encompassed by  

    finite accomplishments” (Davidson 1965, p. 8). If every simple sentence of English 

    results from applying a rule to a collection of lexical elements, for example,   Combine a 

    noun phrase and an intransitive verb   (“Socrates” + “sits” ⇒ “Socrates sits”); and if  

    every complex sentence results from applying a rule to sentences of English, such as 

    Combine two sentences with a conjunction (“Socrates sits” + “Plato stands”⇒ “Socrates 

    sits and Plato stands”), then although human beings have finite cognitive capacities they  

    can understand indefinitely many sentences. (“Socrates sits,” “Socrates sits and Plato 

    stands,” “Socrates sits and Plato stands and Aristotle swims,” and so forth.)

    This, then, gives us the requirement that a theory of meaning be compositional in the 

    sense that it shows how the meanings of complex expressions are systematically  

    “composed” from the meanings of simpler expressions together with a list of their 

    modes of significant combination.

    ii. No Meaning Entities

    Davidson’s second adequacy constraint on a theory of meaning is that it avoid assigning 

    objects (for example, ideas, universals, or intensions) to linguistic expressions as their 

    meanings. In making this demand, Davidson does not stray into a theory of what 

    meanings are; his point, rather, is that “the one thing meanings do not seem to do is oil 

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    the wheels of a theory of meaning… My objections to meanings in the theory of meaning 

    is that… they have no demonstrated use” (Davidson 1967, p. 20).

    To see this, consider that traditional logicians and grammarians divided a sentence into 

    a   subject term and a   predicate term, for example, “Socrates sits” into the subject term 

    “Socrates” and the predicate term “sits,” and assigned to the former as its meaning a 

    certain object, the man Socrates, and to the latter a different sort of object, the universal 

    Sitting, as its meaning. This leaves obscure, however, how the terms “Socrates” and 

    “sits,” or the things Socrates and Sitting, combine to form a proposition, as opposed to, 

    say, the terms “Socrates” and “Plato” (or the objects Socrates and Plato) which cannot 

    combine to form a proposition. It also leaves obscure what role the copula “is” plays in 

    sentences such as “Socrates is wise.” Does “is” refer to a third object that somehow  

    “binds” Socrates to Wisdom? But how does this work? Or does “is” represent some 

    relation? But what relation?

    One might solve these difficulties faced by traditional accounts by assigning to different 

    types of expressions different types of entities as their meanings, where these types 

    differ in ways that make the entities amenable to combining in patterns that mirror the 

     ways their corresponding expressions combine. If we read Frege as a Platonist, then his 

    mature semantics is such a theory, since it divides expressions and their meanings, or 

     Bedeutungen , into two types: “saturated” or “complete” expressions and meanings, and 

    “unsaturated” or “incomplete” expressions and their meanings   (see, for example, Frege, 

    1891). The proper noun “Annette” is an expression of the first type, and it means a 

    particular object of the first type, the woman Annette; while the function expression “the 

    father of ( )” belongs to the second type and means a certain nonspatiotemporal entity of  

    the second type, namely, the function that maps objects to their fathers. (The open 

    parentheses marks the argument place of the function expression, which is to be filled 

     with a saturated expression such as “Annette,” and it lines up with a corresponding 

    empty position in the function itself.) There is also the semantical rule that filling the 

    parentheses of the expression, “the father of ( ),” yields a complete expression that 

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    means the father of whomever is meant by the saturated expression that fills the 

    parentheses: Annette’s father if “Annette” fills the parentheses, Annette’s father’s father 

    if “the father of Annette” fills the parentheses, and so forth. But now one has to ask, 

     what is the point of our having said that the expression, “the father of ( )” means a 

    certain entity? All the work is being done by the rule we have formulated, and none by  

    the ontology.

    There are other methodological considerations that lie behind Davidson’s hostility  

    toward doing semantics by assigning objects and other sorts of entities to words as their 

    meanings. People acquire a language by observing the situated behavior of other people, 

    that is, by observing other people speaking about objects and occurrences in their 

    shared environment; in turn, when they speak, what they mean by their words generally  

    reflects the causes that prompt them to utter those words. These causes are usually  

    mundane sorts of natural things and events, such as other people, grass, people mowing 

    the grass, and the like. This picture of meaning is vague, but it suggests that the 

    psychological achievement of understanding or being able to produce a sentence like 

    “grass is green” rests on the same (or very nearly the same) natural abilities as knowing 

    that grass is green; and it suggests to Davidson that theories of meaning should eschew  

    the esoteric objects and relations that many contemporary philosophies of language 

    presuppose, such as intensions, possible worlds, transworld identity relations, and so 

    forth. By avoiding such things, Davidson positions theories of meaning more closely to 

    the epistemology of linguistic understanding, in the sense of an account of the way that a 

    speaker’s actions and other events are evidence for an interpreter’s attributing meaning 

    to the speaker’s words.

     b. Theories of Truth as Theories of Meaning

    To begin to see what a Davidsonian theory of meaning looks like, recall schema M,

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    (M)  S  means m,

     where sentence   S  belongs to language L and   m is its meaning. Recasting this in a more 

    instructive version,

    (M′)  S   means that p ,

     we replace “ m” in schema M by the schematic variable “   p” in schema M′. In the latter, 

    the schema is filled out by replacing “   p ” with a sentence in the interpreter’s background 

    or metalanguage that translates the target or object language sentence   S  . For example, a 

    theory of meaning for German constructed by an English-speaking interpreter might 

    include as an instance of schema M′ the theorem,

    “Schnee ist weiss” means that snow is white,

     where “Schnee ist weiss” replaces “  S  ” and “snow is white” replaces “   p. ”

    Now, schema M′ is more instructive than its predecessor because while the “  m” in 

    schema   M  names an object that   S means – in violation of Davidson’s second constraint – 

    the expression “  p” holds the place for a sentence (for example, “snow is white”) that the 

    interpreter uses to “track” the meaning of   S  (“Schnee ist weiss”) without reifying that 

    meaning, that is, without treating that meaning as an object. The sentence that replaces 

    “ p ” tracks the meaning of   S  in the sense that schema M′ correlates   S (again, “Schnee ist 

     weiss”) with the extra-linguistic condition that   p   (that snow is white) which the 

    interpreter describes using her own sentence (“snow is white.”)

    Schema M′ points the way forward, but we are not there yet. Davidson is not really  

    interested in constructing theories of meaning in the sense of filling out schema M′ for 

    every sentence of German or Urdu; rather, he theorizes about constructing theories of  

    meaning to gain insight into the concept of meaning. And in this regard, schema M′ 

    comes up short: it relies on the relation “means that” which is essentially synonymy  

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    across languages, which is as much in need of explication as meaning itself. What 

    Davidson is really interested in is giving an explication, in Carnap’s sense (Carnap 1947, 

    pp. 7-8), of an obscure   explanandum, meaning, using a clear and exact   explanans,and 

    he finds his explanans in Tarski’s semantic theory of truth.

    The semantic theory of truth is not a metaphysical theory of truth in the way that the 

    correspondence theory of truth is. That is, the semantic theory of truth does not tell us 

     what truth is, rather, it defines a predicate that applies to all and only the true sentences 

    of a specified language (technically, true-in-L) by showing how the truth-conditions of a 

    sentence of the language depend on the sentence’s internal structure and certain 

    properties of its parts. This should sound familiar: roughly, the semantic theory of truth 

    does for truth what Davidson wishes to do for meaning. Therefore, Davidson replaces 

    schema M′ with Tarski’s schema T:

    (T)  S   is true if and only if p.

    Schema T sits at the center of Tarski’s project. A formally adequate (that is, internally  

    consistent) definition of truth for a language L is, in addition,   materially adequate if it 

    applies to all and only the true sentences of L; Tarski shows that an axiomatic theory θ 

    meets this condition if it satisfies what he calls   Convention T  , which requires that θ 

    entail for each sentence   S  of L an instance of schema T. The idea is that the axioms of θ 

    supply both interpretations for the parts of S  , for example,

    (A.i) “Schnee” means snow,

    and

    (A.ii) an object a satisfies the German expression “ x  ist weiss” if and only if a  is white,

    and rules for forming complex German expressions from simpler ones, such as that

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    (A.iii) “Schnee” + “  x  ist weiss”⇒ “Schnee ist weiss,”

    Together these axioms imply instances of schema T, for example,

    “Schnee ist weiss” is true if and only if snow is white.

    More precisely, an internally consistent theory of truth θ for a language L meets 

    Convention T if it implies for each   S  of L an instance of schema T in which “  p” is 

    replaced by a sentence from the metalanguage that translates   S  . Clearly, such a theory  

     will “get it right” in the sense that the T-sentences (that is, the instances of schema T) 

    that θ implies do state truth conditions for the sentences of the object language.

    Now, Davidson’s claim is not that a Tarski-style theory of truth   in itself  is a theory of  

    meaning; in particular, he remarks that a T-sentence cannot be equated with a 

    statement of a sentence’s meaning. At best, a Tarski-style theory of truth is a part of a 

    theory of meaning, with additional resources being brought into play.

    c. Meaning and Truth

    Notice that Tarski’s Convention T employs the notion of translation, or synonymy across 

    languages, and so a Tarski-style theory of truth cannot, as it stands, supply the 

    explanans Davidson seeks. The underlying point, which Davidson acknowledges “only  

    gradually dawned on me” (1984, p. xiv), is that Tarski analyzes the concept of truth in 

    terms of the concept of meaning (or synonymy), while Davidson’s project depends on 

    making the opposite move: he explains the notion of meaning in terms of truth.

    Davidson, therefore, dispenses with translation and rewrites Convention   T  to require 

    that

    an acceptable theory of truth must entail, for every sentence   s of the object language, a 

    sentence of the form:   s is true if and only if   p ,where“  p” is replaced by any sentence that 

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    is true if and only if  s is. Given this formulation, the theory is tested by the evidence that 

    T-sentences are simply true; we have given up the idea that we must also tell whether 

     what replaces ‘ p ’ translates s. (Davidson 1973, p. 134)

    Thus, where Tarski requires that “ p ” translate   S  , Davidson substitutes the much weaker 

    criterion that the T-sentences “are simply true.”

    But Davidson’s weakened Convention T is open to the following objection. Suppose 

    there is a theory of truth for German, θ1 , that entails the T-sentence,

    (T1 ) “Schnee ist weiss” is true  if and only if snow is white.

    Suppose, further, that there is a second theory of truth for German, θ 2, that is just like  θ 1 

    except that in place of (T  1) it entails the T-sentence,

    (T2 ) “Schnee ist weiss” is true if and only if grass is green.

     A theory of truth that entails (T2) is clearly false, but θ  1   satisfies Davidson’s revised 

    Convention T if and only if θ2 also satisfies it.

    Here is why. The sentences “snow is white” and “grass is green” both happen to be true, 

    and hence the two sentences are materially equivalent, that is,

    Snow is white if and only if grass is green.

    (Sentences are   materially equivalent  if they contingently have the same truth-value; 

    sentences are 

    logically equivalent  if they necessarily have the same truth-value.) But 

    since they are materially equivalent, it turns out that:

    (T1 ) is true if and only if (T  2 ) is true.

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    Therefore, all the T-sentences of θ  1 are true if and only if all the T-sentences of θ2   are 

    true, and thus θ1 satisfies Davidson’s revised Convention T if and only if θ 2   does. The 

    root of this problem is that when it comes to distinguishing between sentences, truth is 

    too coarse a filter to distinguish between materially equivalent sentences with different 

    meanings.

    Davidson has a number of responses to this objection (in Davidson 1975). He points out 

    that someone who knows that θ is a materially adequate theory of truth for a language L 

    knows more than that its T-sentences are true. She knows the axioms of θ, which assign 

    meaning to the lexical elements of L, the words and simple expressions out of which 

    complex expressions and whole sentences are composed; and she knows that these 

    axioms imply the T-sentence correlations between object language sentences (“Schnee 

    ist weiss”) and their interpreting conditions (that snow is white). Thus, someone who 

    knows that θ is a materially adequate theory of truth for a language L knows a 

    systematic procedure for assigning to the sentences of L their truth-conditions, making 

    one’s grasp of a theory of truth-cum-meaning a holistic affair: knowing the T-sentence 

    for any one object language sentence is tied to knowing the T-sentences for many object 

    language sentences. (For example, knowing that “‘Schnee ist die Farbe der Wolken” is 

    true if and only if snow is the color of clouds, and that “Schnee ist weiss” is true if and 

    only if snow is white, is tied to knowing that “Wolken sind weiss” is true if and only if  

    clouds are white.) In this way, although Davidson’s version of Convention T -- stated in 

    terms of truth rather than translation -- does not   prima facie filter out theories like θ2, 

    such theories will raise red flags as deviant assignments (such as grass to “Schnee”) 

    ramify through the language and interpreters consider the evidence of speakers pointing 

    to snow and uttering, “Das ist Schnee!”

    It matters, too, that the T-sentences of a Davidsonian theory of truth-cum-meaning are 

    laws of an empirical theory and not mere accidental generalizations. The important 

    difference here is that as empirical laws and not simple statements of chance 

    correlations, T-sentences support counterfactual inferences: just as it is true that a 

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    certain rock would have fallen at 32 ft/sec 2 if it had been dropped, even if it wasnot, it is 

    also true that a German speaker’s utterance of “Schnee ist weiss” would be true if and 

    only if snow is white, even in a world where snow is not white. (But in a world where 

    grass is green, and snow is not white, it is not the case that a German speaker’s 

    utterance of “Schnee ist weiss” would be true if and only if grass is green.)

    This means that there is a logically “tighter” connection between the left- and right-hand 

    sides of the T-sentences of materially adequate theories. This logically “tighter” 

    connection underwrites the role that T-sentences have in constructing explanations of  

    speakers’ behavior and, in turn, is a product of the nature of the evidence interpreters 

    employ in constructing Davidsonian theories of truth-cum-meaning. An interpreter 

     witnesses German speakers uttering “Schnee ist weiss!” while indicating freshly fallen 

    snow; the interpreter singles out snow’s being white as the salient feature of the 

    speaker’s environment; and she infers that snow’s being white   causes him to hold the 

    sentence, ‘Schnee ist weiss!,” true. Thus, the connection between snow’s being white and 

    the T-sentence is more than a chance correlation, and this gets expressed by there being 

    something stronger than an extensional relation between a statement of the evidence 

    and the theory.

    This has often been taken to be a fatal concession, inasmuch as Davidson is understood 

    to be committed to giving an   extensional  account of the knowledge someone possesses 

     when she understands a language. However, Davidson denies that he is committed to 

    giving an extensional account of an interpreter’s knowledge; all he is after is formulating 

    the theory of truth-cum-meaning  itself in extensional terms, and he allows that ancillary  

    knowledge   about  that theory may involve concepts or relations that cannot be expressed 

    in extensionalist terms. Thus, it is not an objection to his project that an interpreter’s 

    background logic, for example, in her understanding of her own theory, should involve 

    appeal to intensional notions.

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    d. Formal and Natural Languages

    Tarski restricts his attention to investigating the semantical properties of formal 

    languages, whereas Davidson’s interest lies in the investigation of natural languages. 

    Formal languages are well-behaved mathematical objects whose structures can be 

    exactly and exhaustively described in purely syntactical terms, while natural languages 

    are anything but well-behaved. They are plastic and subject to ambiguity, and they  

    contain myriad linguistic forms that resist, to one degree or another, incorporation into 

    a theory of truth via the methods available to the logical semanticist. Davidson has 

     written on the problems posed by several of these linguistic forms (in Davidson 1967a, 

    1968, 1978, and 1979) including indexicals, adverbial modifiers, indirect discourse, 

    metaphor, mood, and the propositional attitudes.

    i. Indexicals

    It is instructive to see how Davidson handles indexicals. The key insight here is that 

    truth is properly a property of the situated production of a sentence token by a speaker 

    at a certain time, that is, it is a property of an   utterance , not a   sentence. We define, 

    therefore, 

    an utterance to be an ordered triple consisting of a sentence token, a time, 

    and a speaker. Truth is thus a property of such a triple, and in constructing a 

    Tarski-style theory of truth for a language L the goal is to have it entail T-theorems such 

    as:

    “Das ist weiss” is true when spoken by   x at  t if and only if the object indicated by   x at  t is 

     white.

    This T-theorem captures two distinct indexical elements. First, the German pronoun 

    “das” refers to the object the speaker indicates when she makes her utterance; we model 

    its contribution to the utterance’s truth-condition by explicitly referring on the right side 

    of the T-theorem to that object. Second, the German verb “ist” is conjugated in the 

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    present indicative tense and refers to the time the speaker performs her utterance. We 

    represent this indexical feature by repeating the time variable “  t  ” on both sides of the 

    T-theorem. Not all sentences contain indexicals (“that,” “she,” “he,” “it”, “I,” “here,” 

    “now,” “today,” and so forth, but unless it is formulated in the so-called “eternal 

    present” (for example, “5 plus 7 is twelve”), every sentence contains an indexical 

    element in the tense of the sentence’s main verb.

    ii. Indirect Discourse

    The philosophy of language is thick with proposals for treating the anomalous behavior 

    of linguistic contexts involving intensional idioms, including especially indirect 

    discourse and propositional attitude constructions. In such contexts, familiar 

    substitution patterns fail; for example, it is true that

    (1) The Earth moves,

    and that

    (2) The Earth = the planet on which D.D. was born in 1917.

    By the Principle of Extensionality,

    Co-referring terms can be exchanged without affecting the truth-value of contexts in 

     which those terms occur,

     we can infer that

    The planet on which D.D. was born in 1917 moves.

    However, if we report that Galileo said that (1), that is,

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    (3) Galileo said that the Earth moves,

     we are blocked from making the substitution,

    (4) Galileo said that the planet on which D.D. was born in 1917 moves,

    for surely Galileo did not say   that , since he died nearly three hundred years before D.D. 

     was born. (2) and (3) are true, while (4) is false; hence (2) and (3) do not entail (4), and 

    the Principle of Extensionality fails for “says that” contexts.

    Davidson’s solution to this problem is as ingenious as it is controversial, for it comes at 

    the price of some grammatical novelty. He argues that the word “that” that occurs in (3) 

    is a   demonstrative pronoun and not, as grammar books tell us, a   relative pronoun ; the 

    direct object of “said” is this demonstrative, and not the subordinate noun clause “that 

    the Earth moves.” In fact, under analysis this noun clause disappears and becomes two 

    separate expressions: the demonstrative “that,” which completes the open sentence 

    “Galileo said   x ,” and the   grammatically independent sentence “The Earth moves.” This 

    new sentence is the demonstrative’s referent; or, rather, its referent is the   speaker’s 

    utterance   of the sentence, “The Earth moves,” which follows her utterance of the sentence “Galileo said that.” Thus Davidson proposes that from a logical point of view, 

    (3) is composed of two separate utterances  :

    (5) Galileo said that. The Earth moves.

    In other words, the   grammatical  connection between “The Earth moves” and “Galileo 

    said that” is severed and replaced by the same relationship that connects snow and my  

    pointing to snow and saying “That is white.”

    More properly, (5) should be:

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    (6) Galileo said something that meant the same as my next utterance. The Earth moves.

    This qualification is needed, since the utterance to which “that” refers in (5) is   my 

    utterance of a sentence in   my language, which I use to report an utterance Galileo made 

    in   his language. As Davidson sometimes puts it, Galileo and I are   samesayers: what he 

    and I mean, when he performs his utterance and I perform mine, is the same. Finally, a 

    careful semantical analysis of (6) should look something like this:

    (7) There exists some utterance   x  performed by Galileo, and   x   means the same in 

    Galileo’s idiolect as my next utterance means in mine. The Earth moves.

    Now in 

    my 

    utterance, “the Earth” can be exchanged for “the planet on which D.D. was 

     born in 1917” because as I use them both expressions refer to the same object, namely, 

    the Earth. Thus, the Principle of Extensionality is preserved.

    Davidson proposes that this account can be extended to treat other opaque 

    constructions in the object language, such as the propositional attitudes (Davidson 

    1975) and entailment relations (Davidson 1976). Looking at the former, the idea is that 

     by analogy with (3), (5), and (6),

    (8) Galileo believed that the Earth moves,

    should be glossed as

    (9) Galileo believed that. The Earth moves,

    or, better,

    (10) Galileo believed something that had the same content meant as my next utterance. 

    The Earth moves.

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     A question, then, is what is this   something  that Galileo believed? In the analysis of  

    indirect discourse, my sentence (“The Earth moves”) tracks an actual utterance of  

    Galileo’s (“Si muove”), but Galileo had many beliefs he never expressed verbally; so it 

    cannot be an utterance of Galileo’s. Alternatively, one might treat thoughts as inner 

    mental representations and belief as a relation between thinkers and thoughts so 

    conceived; then what has the same content as my utterance of my sentence, “The Earth 

    moves,” is Galileo’s mental representation in his language of thought. However, 

    Davidson argues elsewhere (Davidson 1989) that believing is not a relation between 

    thinker and mental objects; this point is important to the position he stakes out in the 

    internalism/externalism debate in the philosophy of mind.

    Instead, Davidson proposes (in Davidson 1975) that (3) is to (6) as (8) is to:

    (11) Galileo would be honestly speaking his mind were he to say something that had the 

    same content as my next utterance. The Earth moves.

    Galileo never actually said something that means the same as my sentence, “The Earth 

    moves,” but had he spoken his mind about the matter, he would have. (Historically, of  

    course, Galileo did say such a thing, but let us suppose that he did not.) This analysis, 

    however, imports a counterfactual condition into the T-sentences of an interpreter’s 

    theory for Galileo’s words and thoughts, which Davidson wants to avoid. Finally, in the 

    same article Davidson seems to suggest that we treat Galileo’s thought more directly as a 

    “belief state,” which might be glossed as:

    (12) Galileo was in some belief state that had the same content meant as my next 

    utterance. The Earth moves.

    Intuitively, this seems right: what I track with my utterance is precisely the content of  

    Galileo’s belief. This leaves open, however, what “belief states” are such that they can be 

    quantified over (as in (10)) and have contents that can be tracked by utterances. This, 

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    though, is a problem for the philosophy of mind rather than the philosophy of language, 

    and there is no reason to suppose that it affects Davidson’s proposal more than other 

    accounts of the semantics of the propositional attitudes.

    2. Davidson’s Theory of Interpretation

    Consideration of the exigencies of interpreting a person’s speech behavior yields 

    additional constraints on theories of truth-cum-meaning, and it also provides deep 

    insights into the nature of language and meaning. Davidson examines interpretation 

    and the construction of theories of meaning by drawing extensively on the work of his 

    mentor, W. V. Quine.

    a. Radical Translation

    In Quine’s famous thought experiment of   radical translation , we imagine a “field 

    linguist” who observes the verbal behavior of speakers of a foreign language, and we 

    reflect on her task of constructing a translation manual that maps the speakers’ 

    language onto her own. The translation task is   radical  in the sense that Quine assumes 

    she has no prior knowledge whatsoever of the speakers’ language or its relation to her home language. Hence her only evidence for constructing and testing her translation 

    manual are her observations of the speakers’ behavior and their relation to their 

    environment.

    The linguist’s entering wedge into a foreign language are those of the speakers’ 

    utterances that seem to bear directly on conspicuous features of the situation she shares 

     with her subject. Taking Quine’s well-known example, suppose a rabbit scurries within the field of view of both the linguist and an alien speaker, who then utters, “Gavagai!” 

     With this as her initial evidence, the linguist sifts through the features of the complex 

    situation that embeds his speech behavior; she reasons that were she in the subject’s 

    position of seeing a rabbit, she would be disposed to assert, “Lo, a rabbit!” Supposing, 

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    then, that the alien speaker’s verbal dispositions relate to his environment as her verbal 

    disposition are related to her own, she tentatively translates “Gavagai!” with her own 

    sentence, “Lo, a rabbit!”

     b. Radical Interpretation

    Taking his inspiration from Quine, Davidson holds that   a radical interpreter   thus 

     begins with observations such as:

    (13)    A belongs to a community of speakers of a common language, call it   K  , and he 

    holds “Gavagai!” true on Saturday at noon, and there is a rabbit visible to   A on Saturday  

    at noon,

    and eliciting additional evidence from observing   K  -speakers’ situated verbal behavior, 

    she infers that

    (14) If   x  is a   K -speaker, then   x  holds “Gavagai!” true at   t  if and only if there is a rabbit 

     visible to x  at t  .

    This inference is subject to the vagaries that attend empirical research, but having 

    gathered an adequate sample of instances of   K  -speakers holding “Gavagai” true when 

    and only when rabbits cross their paths, she takes (14) to be confirmed. In turn, then, 

    she takes (14) as support that (partly) confirms the following T-sentence of a 

    Tarski-style truth theory for K  :

    (15) “Gavagai!” is true when spoken by x  at t   if and only there is a rabbit visible to  x   at t  .

    Note that in reconstructing the language   K  , Davidson’s linguist does not mention 

    sentences of her home language. Of course, she  uses her own sentences in making these 

    assignments, but her sentences are directed upon extra-linguistic reality. Thus, unlike a 

    Quinean radical   translator , who does mention sentences of his home language, a 

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    Davidsonian radical   interpreter   adopts a   semantical    stance: she relates speakers’ 

    sentences to the world by assigning them objective truth conditions describing 

    extra-linguistic situations and objects. It is in this sense that a Davidsonian linguist is an 

    interpreter , and Davidson calls the project undertaken by his linguist the construction 

    of a theory of interpretation .

    i. Principles of Charity: Coherence

    Like any empirical scientist, a Davidsonian radical interpreter relies on methodological 

    assumptions she makes to move from her observations (13) to her intermediate 

    conclusions (14) and to the final form of her theory (15). Davidson identifies as the 

    radical interpreter’s two most important methodological assumptions the 

     Principle of  

    (Logical) Coherence and the   Principle of Correspondence . Taken together these canons 

    of interpretation are known, somewhat misleadingly, as the Principle(s) of Charity.

    Since a Davidsonian theory of interpretation is modeled on a Tarski-style theory of  

    truth, one of the first steps an interpreter takes is to look for a coherent structure in the 

    sentences of alien speakers. She does this by assuming that a speaker’s behavior satisfies 

    strong, normative constraints, namely, that he reasons in accordance with logical laws. 

    Making this assumption, she can diagram the logical patterns in speakers’ verbal 

     behavior and leverage evidence she gleans from her observations into a detailed picture 

    of the internal structure of his language.

     Assuming that a speaker reasons in accordance with logical laws is neither an empirical 

    hypothesis about a subject’s intellectual capacities nor an expression of the interpreter’s 

    goodwill toward her subject. Satisfying the norms of rationality is a 

    condition  on speaking a language and having thoughts, and hence failing to locate sufficient 

    consistency in someone’s behavior means there is   nothing to interpret. The assumption 

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    that someone is rational is a foundation on which the project of interpreting his 

    utterances rests.

    ii. Principles of Charity: Correspondence

    The problem the radical interpreter faces is that by hypothesis she does not know what a 

    speaker’s sentences mean, and neither does she have direct access to the contents of his 

    propositional attitudes, such as his beliefs or desires. Both of these factors bear on 

    making sense of his verbal behavior, however, for   which   sentences a speaker puts 

    forward as true depends simultaneously on the meanings of those sentences and on his 

     beliefs. For example, a   K  -speaker utters “Gavagai!” only if (α) the sentence is true if and 

    only if a rabbit presents itself to him, and (β) he believes that a rabbit presents itself to 

    him.

     A speaker’s holding a sentence true is thus (as Davidson put it) a “vector of two forces” 

    (Davidson 1974a, p. 196), what meanings his words have and what he believes about the 

     world. The interpreter thus faces the problem of too many unknowns, which she solves 

     by performing her own thought experiment: she projects herself into her subject’s shoes 

    and assumes that he does or would believe what she, were she in his position, would 

     believe. This solves the problem of her not knowing what the speaker believes since she 

    knows what she would believe were she in his situation, and hence she knows what her 

    subject does believe if he believes what she thinks he ought to believe. The Principle of  

    Correspondence is the methodological injunction that an interpreter affirm the if-clause.

    The Principle of Correspondence applies especially to speakers’ observation sentences, 

    for example, there goes a rabbit! These are the points of immediate causal contact  between the world shared by speakers and interpreters, on the one hand, and the 

    utterances and attitudes of speakers, on the other. Where there is greater distance 

     between cause (features of the speaker’s situation) and effect (which sentences the 

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    speaker puts forward as true), there are extra degrees of freedom in explaining how the 

    speaker might reasonably hold true something that the interpreter believes is false.

    Davidson sometimes formulates the Principle of Correspondence in terms of the 

    interpreter’s maximizing agreement between her and the speakers she interprets, but 

    this is misleading. An interpreter needs to fill out the contents of the speaker’s attitudes 

    if her project is to move forward; and she does this by attributing to him those beliefs 

    that allow her to tell the most coherent story about what he believes. Thus, she routes 

    attributions of beliefs to the speaker through what she knows about his beliefs and 

     values. An interpreter will still export to her subject a great deal of her own world view, 

     but if there are grounds for attributing to him certain beliefs that she takes to be false, 

    then she does so if what she knows about him makes it more reasonable than not. She 

    thus makes use of whatever she knows about the speaker’s personal history and 

    psychology.

    c. Language without Conventions

    Davidson typically presents radical interpretation as targeting a community’s language, 

     but in his more careful statements he argues that the focus of interpretation is the 

    speech behavior of a single individual over a given stretch of time (Davidson 1986). One 

    reason for this is that Davidson denies that conventions shared by members of a 

    linguistic community play any philosophically interesting role in an account of meaning. 

    Shared conventions facilitate communication, but they are in principle dispensible. For 

    so long as an audience discerns the intention behind a speaker’s utterance, for example, 

    he intends that his utterance of “Schnee ist weiss” mean that snow is white, then his 

    utterance means that snow is white, regardless of whether he and they share the practice 

    that speakers use “Schnee ist weiss” to mean that snow is white. This point is implicit in 

    the project of radical interpretation.

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    This implies, according to Davidson, that what we ordinarily think of as a single natural 

    language, such as German or Urdu, is like a smooth curve drawn through the idiolects of  

    different speakers. It also underwrites Davidson’s claim that “interpretation is domestic 

    as well as foreign” (Davidson 1973, p. 125), that is, there is no   essential  difference 

     between understanding the words spoken by radically alien speakers and our familiars; 

    there is only the practical difference that one has more and better information about the 

    linguistic behavior and propositional attitudes of those with whom one has more 

    contact.

    d. Indeterminacy of Interpretation

    Davidson, following Quine, argues that although the methodology of radical 

    interpretation (or translation, for Quine) winnows the field of admissible candidates, it 

    does not identify a unique theory that best satisfies its criteria. At the end of the day  

    there will be competing theories that are mutually inconsistent but which do equally  

     well in making sense of a speaker’s utterance, and in this sense interpretation (and 

    translation) is indeterminate.

    Quine draws from this the skeptical conclusion that there is “no fact of the matter” when 

    it comes to saying what speakers or their words mean. Davidson stops short of Quine’s 

    skepticism, and he draws a different moral from the indeterminacy arguments. (In this 

    section we emphasize Davidson’s agreements with Quine, in the following his 

    disagreement.)

    Here is how indeterminacy infects the task of the radical translator. She begins with a 

    speaker’s situated observation sentences, and she finds her first success in correlating a sentence   S  H   of her home language with a sentence   S  O of her subject’s language. She 

    hypothesizes that   S H and   S O are synonymous, and this is her wedge into the speaker’s 

    language. Next, the translator makes hypotheses about how to segment the speaker’s 

    observation sentences into words (or morphemes) and about how to line these up with 

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     words of her own language. For example, she may identify the initial vocable of  

    “Gavagai!,” “ga,” with the demonstrative “there” in her home language, and “gai” with 

    the common noun “rabbit.” This permits her to puzzle out the translation of  

    nonobservation sentences that share some of their parts with observation sentences. (In 

    the Davidsonian version, these correlations take the form of interpretations rather than 

    translations, but the point is the same.)

    These additional hypotheses are essential to her project, but they are not backed by any  

    direct behavioral evidence. They are confirmed just so long as the translations or 

    interpretations they warrant are consistent with the linguist’s evidence for her evolving 

    theory; however, that evidence has the form of information about the translation or 

    interpretation of complete sentences. Indeterminacy arrives on the scene, then, because 

    different sets of hypotheses and the translations or interpretations they imply do equally  

     well in making sense of a speaker’s   sentences , even though they assign different 

    translations or interpretations to the parts  of those sentences.

    Indeterminacy, however, also infects the translation and interpretation of complete 

    sentences. This is because the evidence for a translation manual or theory of  

    interpretation does not, in fact, come at the level of sentences. The radical translator or 

    interpreter does not test her translations or T-sentences one-by-one; rather, what goes 

     before the tribunal of evidence is   a complete translation manual    or   theory of  

    interpretation   for the entire language  (Quine 1953). This means that in the case of  

    sentences, too, there is slack between evidence and a translation or interpretation as the 

    linguist may vary the translation or interpretation of a given sentence by making 

    complementary changes elsewhere in her translation manual or theory of interpretation. 

    Thus the interpretation of sentences as well as terms is indeterminate.

    e. Meaning and Interpretation

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    Davidson’s response to the indeterminacy arguments is at the same time more modest 

    and more ambitious than Quine’s. It is more modest because Davidson does not endorse 

    the skeptical conclusion that Quine draws from the arguments that since there are no 

    determinate meanings, there are no meanings. This reasoning is congenial to Quine’s 

    parsimony and his behaviorism: all there is, according to Quine, are speaker’s behavior 

    and dispositions to behave and whatever can be constructed from or explained in terms 

    of that behavior and those dispositions.

    It is more ambitious than Quine’s response insofar as Davidson offers in place of Quine’s 

    skepticism what Hume would call a   skeptical solution to the indeterminacy problem. 

    That is, while acknowledging the validity of Quine’s argument that there are no 

    meanings, he undertakes to reconceive the concept of meaning that figures as a premise 

    in that reasoning (as Hume reconceives the concept of causation that figures in his 

    skeptical arguments). There are no determinate meanings, therefore, meaning is not 

    determinate. In place of the traditional picture of meanings as semantical quanta that 

    speakers associate with their verbal expressions, Davidson argues that meaning is the 

    invariant structure that is common to the competing interpretations of speakers’ 

     behavior (Davidson 1999, p. 81). That there is such a structure is implied by holism: in 

    assigning a certain meaning to a single utterance, an interpreter has already chosen one 

    of a number of competing theories to interpret a speaker’s over-all language. Choosing 

    that theory, in turn, presupposes that she has identified in the speaker’s utterances a 

    pattern or structure she takes that theory to describe at least as well as any other. Herein 

    lies the Indeterminacy of Interpretation, for that theory does  only at least as well as any  

    other. There is, therefore, no more an objective basis for choosing one theory of  

    meaning over another than there is for preferring the Fahrenheit to the Celsius scale for 

    temperature ascriptions.

    This conclusion, however, has no skeptical implications, for by assumption each theory  

    does equally well at describing   the same structure. Whether there is a “fact of the 

    matter” when it comes to saying what speakers or their sentences mean, therefore, 

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     becomes the question whether there are objective grounds for saying that that structure 

    exists. That structure is a property of a system of events, and hence the grounds for 

    saying that it exists are the criteria for attributing those properties to those events; the 

    skeptical conclusion would follow, therefore, only if there were no such criteria. The 

    argument for the Indeterminacy of Interpretation does not prove   that  , however. On the 

    contrary, the methodology of radical interpretation provides a framework for attributing 

    patterns of properties to speakers and their utterances.

     As Davidson reconceives it, therefore, understanding a person’s sentences involves 

    discerning patterns in his situated actions, but no discrete “meanings.” An interpreter 

    makes sense of her interlocutor by treating him as a rational agent and reflecting on the 

    contents of her own propositional attitudes, and she tracks what his sentences mean 

     with her own sentences. This project may fail in practice, especially where the 

    interpretation is genuinely radical and there is moral as well as linguistic distance 

    separating an interpreter and a speaker; but in principle there is no linguistic behavior 

    that cannot be interpreted, that is, understood, by another. If an interpreter can discern 

    a pattern in a creature’s situated linguistic behavior, then she can make sense of his 

     words; alternatively, if she cannot interpret his utterances, then she has no grounds for 

    attributing meaning to the sounds he produces nor evidence to support the hypothesis 

    that he is a rational agent. These observations are not a statement of linguistic 

    imperialism; rather, they are implications of the methodology of interpretation and the 

    role that Tarski-style theories of truth-cum-meaning play in the enterprise. Meaning is 

    essentially intersubjective.

    Further, meaning is objective in the sense that most of what speakers say about the 

     world is true of the world. Some critics object that this statement rests on an optimistic 

    assessment of human capacities for judgment; however, Davidson’s point is not an 

    empirical claim that could turn out to be mistaken. Rather, it is a statement of the 

    methodology of radical interpretation, an assumption an interpreter makes to gain 

    access to her subject’s language. Her only path into his language is by way of the world 

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    they share since she makes sense of his sentences by discerning patterns in the relations 

     between those sentences and the objects and events in the world that cause him to hold 

    those sentences true. If too many of his utterances are false, then the link between what 

    he says and thinks, on the one hand, and the world, on the other, is severed; and the 

    enterprise of interpretation halts. Finding too much unexplainable error in his 

    statements about the world, therefore, is not an option, if she is going to interpret him.

    3. References and Further Reading

    a. Anthologies of Davidson’s Writings

    ● Davidson, Donald. 1984. Inquiries into Truth and Interpretation. New York: Oxford 

    University Press. [Cited as ITI]

    ● Davidson, Donald. 2001. Essays on Actions and Events. Oxford University Press. [Cited as 

    EAE]

    ● Davidson, Donald. 2001. Subjective, Intersubjective, Objective. New York: Oxford 

    University Press. [Cited as SIO]

    ● Davidson, Donald. 2005. Truth, Language, and History. New York: Oxford University Press. 

    [Cited as TLH]

    ● Davidson, Donald. 2005A. Truth and Predication. Boston: Harvard University Press.○   Contains the texts of Davidson’s 1989 Dewey Lectures (given at Columbia University) on

    the concept of truth together with his 2001 Hermes Lectures (given at the University ofPerugia). The first half is useful in understanding the role truth plays in his systematic

    philosophy, and the second half contains Davidson’s interesting criticisms of his

    predecessors, ranging from Plato to Quine.

     b. Individual Articles by Davidson

    ● Davidson, Donald. 1965. “Theories of Meaning and Learnable Languages,” reprinted in ITI.

    ● Davidson, Donald. 1967. “Truth and Meaning,” reprinted in ITI.

    ● Davidson, Donald. 1967a. “The Logical Form of Action Sentences,” reprinted in EAE.

    ● Davidson, Donald. 1968. “On Saying That,” reprinted in ITI.

    ● Davidson, Donald. 1973. “Radical Interpretation,” reprinted in ITI.

    ● Davidson, Donald. 1974. “Belief and the Basis of Meaning,” reprinted in ITI.

    ● Davidson, Donald. 1974a. “On the Very Idea of a Conceptual Scheme,” reprinted in ITI.

    ● Davidson, Donald. 1975. “Thought and Talk,” reprinted in ITI.

    ● Davidson, Donald. 1976. “Reply to Foster,” reprinted in ITI.

    ● Davidson, Donald. 1978. “What Metaphors Mean,” reprinted in ITI.

    ● Davidson, Donald. 1986. “A Nice Derangement of Epitaphs,” reprinted in TLH.

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    ● Davidson, Donald. 1989. “What is Present to the Mind?”, reprinted in SIO.

    ● Davidson, Donald. 1996. “The Folly of Trying to Define Truth,” reprinted in TLH.

    ● Davidson, Donald. 1999. “Reply to W.V. Quine,” printed in Hahn 1999.

    c. Primary Works by other Authors● Carnap, Rudolf. 1947., Meaning and Necessity, 2nd ed. Chicago: University of Chicago 

    Press.

    ● Frege, Gottlob. 1891. “Funktion und Begriff,” translated as “Function and Concept” and 

    reprinted in Brian McGuinness et al. (eds.), Collected Papers on Mathematics, Logic, and 

    Philosophy, 1984. New York: Basil Blackwell.

    ● Quine, W.V. 1935. “Truth by Convention,” reprinted in The Ways of Paradox, 1976. 

    Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

    d. Secondary Sources

    i. Anthologies

    ● De Caro, Marion. 1999. Interpretations and Causes: New Perspectives on Donald 

    Davidson’s Philosophy. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers.○   Articles by an internationally diverse range of authors focusing on the interplay between

    the notions of interpretation and causation in Davidson’s philosophy.

    ● Dasenbrock, Reed Way. 1993. Literary Theory After Davidson. University Park: Penn State 

    Press.○   Articles addressing the significance of Davidson’s philosophy of language for literary

    theory.

    ● Hahn, Edwin Lewis. 1999. The Philosophy of Donald Davidson. The Library of Living 

    Philosophers, volume XXVII. Peru, IL: Open Court Publishing Company.○   A useful collection of articles, including Davidson’s intellectual autobiography and his

    replies to authors.

    ● Kotatko, Petr, Pagin, Peter and Segal, Gabriel. 2001. Interpreting Davidson. Stanford, CA: 

    Center for the Study of Language and Information Publications.

    ● Lepore, Ernest. 1986. Truth and Interpretation: Perspectives on the Philosophy of Donald 

    Davidson. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.○   An excellent collection of articles addressing a range of topics in Davidson’s philosophy of

    language.● Stoecker, Ralf. 1993. Reflecting Davidson: Donald Davidson Responding to an International 

    Forum of Philosophers. Berlin: de Gruyter.

    ii. Critical Discussions of Davidson’s Philosophy

    ● Evnine, Simon. 1991. Donald Davidson. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.

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    ● Joseph, Marc. 2004. Donald Davidson. Montreal: McGill-Queens University Press.

    ● Lepore, Ernest, and Ludwig, Kirk. 2005. Davidson: Meaning, Truth, Language, and Reality. 

    New York: Oxford University Press.

    ● Lepore, Ernest, and Ludwig, Kirk. 2009. Donald Davidson’s Truth-Theoretic Semantics. 

    New York: Oxford University Press.○

      A detailed and technical examination of Davidson’s use of Tarski-style theories of truth inhis semantical project.

    ● Ramberg, Bjørn. 1989. Donald Davidson’s Philosophy of Language. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.

     Author Information

    Marc A. Joseph

    Email: [email protected]

    Mills College

    U. S. A.