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Dummett's Backward Road to Frege and to Intuitionism - Tripod

Dummett's Backward Road to Frege and to Intuitionism - Tripod

Dummett's Backward Road to Frege and to Intuitionism - Tripod

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with Dummett’s program. The argument seems supported by <strong>Frege</strong>: “in saying something about the<br />

meaning [i.e. reference] of the sign ‘3 + 5’, I express a sense” (<strong>Frege</strong> 1980b: 149). But the argument<br />

gets things backwards. Dummett might as well say that <strong>Frege</strong> introduces references <strong>to</strong> explain how we<br />

can identify senses. 18 That we talk about references “only via senses” (<strong>Frege</strong> 1979c: 124) does not<br />

support Dummett’s argument. Quite the opposite. If a reference must be given in some way, so that<br />

fixing a sense for an expression is a necessary condition of fixing the reference (if any) of that<br />

expression, then the logical priority is that of fixing the sense over fixing the reference. And this is the<br />

forward road from sense <strong>to</strong> reference. I can convey a reference <strong>to</strong> you via a sense of my choice only if I<br />

have already singled out the reference via some sense. And you will grasp the reference via the sense I<br />

choose, not the sense I choose via the reference. I think the (1980b: 149) text merely indicates that<br />

senses are required in addition <strong>to</strong> references in order <strong>to</strong> explain informative identity statements. 19<br />

In <strong>Frege</strong>: Philosophy of Language, there is a passage that seems <strong>to</strong> anticipate, <strong>and</strong> even <strong>to</strong> call<br />

for, Dummett’s program as a theoretical ideal explaining <strong>Frege</strong>’s “whole theory of meaning,” but<br />

finding the program <strong>to</strong>o problematic <strong>to</strong> succeed (1981: 652–53). The forced choice argument seems <strong>to</strong><br />

be what carries us from references <strong>to</strong> senses (1981: 653). If the forced choice argument is <strong>Frege</strong>’s, there<br />

is no need for Dummett’s emendation, since the argument implies a forced choice of all senses,<br />

including indirect senses. But be that as it may, the first problem for Dummett is that <strong>Frege</strong> “failed<br />

almost completely” <strong>to</strong> provide “an account of the other means that exist, besides definition,...for<br />

introducing expressions in<strong>to</strong> the language” (Dummett 1981: 652–53). The answer is explication; there<br />

is also explanation. (<strong>Frege</strong> is indeed brief on these matters.) The second problem for Dummett seems <strong>to</strong><br />

be that truth-conditions do not determine a “unique solution” of subsentential references (1981: 653).<br />

This is the permutation problem for references.<br />

Dummett says, “The references of the component expressions constitute their respective<br />

contributions <strong>to</strong> the determination of truth-value; <strong>and</strong> the sense of any one of them constitutes the way<br />

28

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