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“Thinking and Meaning”1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 February 2009

Extract

Professor Ayer's lecture is not only a most auspicious inauguration; it is also an important contribution to philosophy. It is perhaps the best and the most exciting work he has written, and that is saying a good deal. There is a certain theory about thought and its objects which is often hinted at in the utterances and the writings of contemporary empiricist philosophers, but so far as I know it has never before been stated in print. Mr. Ayer has stated it, clearly and in detail, with all his well-known force and felicity of style. It is a strange and rather shocking theory, very different (in appearance at any rate) from the one which most philosophers hitherto have believed. But if we are shocked by it, the shock will be salutary. The dragon has at last come clearly into view. If we resolve to accustom ourselves to it and treat it kindly, we may hope that it will transform itself by degrees into a nice gentle domestic pet, as other philosophical dragons have before.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Philosophy 1948

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References

page 240 note 1 Private to whom or to what? If one holds that persons are logical constructions, this question will demand some consideration.

page 244 note 1 Should this be “to which I believe the truth of p to be relevant”? If I mistakenly believe it to be relevant when in fact it is not, I shall talk and act in the required way. If I mistakenly believe it not to be relevant when in fact it is, I shall not speak or act in this way. But if so, the analysis seems to be circular. There is a similar difficulty about the phrase “likely to be successful” at the end of the previous paragraph. What matters is that I should believe, however irrationally, that the behaviour is likely to be successful.

page 255 note 1 Treatise, Book I, part i, section 7, of “Abstract Ideas” (Selby-Bigge pp. 20, 23. Everyman, pp. 28, 31.)