2022-02-01T19:50:00Z
2022-07-29T05:10:23Z
2021-07-29
2022-02-01T19:50:00Z
The paper distinguishes between two conceptions of kinds defined by constitutive rules, the one suggested by Searle, and the one invoked by Williamson to define assertion. Against recent arguments to the contrary by Maitra, Johnson and others, it argues for the superiority of the latter in the first place as an account of games. On this basis, the paper argues that the alleged disanalogies between real games and language games suggested in the literature in fact don't exist. The paper relies on Rawls's distinction between types ('blueprints', as Rawls called them) of practices and institutions defined by constitutive rules, and those among them that are actually in force, and hence are truly normative; it defends along Rawlsian lines that a plurality of norms apply to actual instances of rule-constituted practices, and uses this Rawlsian line to block the examples that Maitra, Johnson and others provide to sustain their case
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Filosofia del llenguatge; Convenció (Filosofia); Norma (Filosofia); Philosophy of language; Convention (Philosophy); Norm (Philosophy)
Springer Nature
Versió postprint del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1007/s13164-021-00576-z
Review of Philosophy and Psychology, 2021
https://doi.org/10.1007/s13164-021-00576-z
(c) Springer Nature, 2021
Filosofia [706]