PHILOSOPHY OF LANGUAGE

FALL 2004



 
 

PROFESSOR: Chris Latiolais
Philosophy Department
Kalamazoo College
Humphrey House #201
Telephone # 337-7076
Offices Hours:
 1) Mon. 2:00 - 3:30
 2) Tues. 10:30 - 11:30
 3) By Appointment.
 

COURSE DESCRIPTION:
 
  Examination of some basic issues in the philosophy of language, with an emphasis upon speech-act theory.  We will first review selected issues in traditional semantics: the study of meaning, reference, truth and translation.  We will then turn to pragmatics or speech-act theory, the study of what we do with words.  We  close with a discussion of the significance of the philosophy of language for sociology, political science, psychology and literary analysis.
 

COURSE REQUIREMENTS:

 

    Students will be evaluated on the basis of class participation, vocabulary quizzes, midterm examinations and a final paper.
TYPE OF EVALUATION FREQUENCY TOTAL
Class Participation: Seminar presentations, classroom discussion and email correspondence 15%
Midterm Examinations  2 @ 15% = 30%
Quizzes  5 @ 6% = 30%
Final Paper (10-15 pages) 1 @ 25% = 25%

 


 

REQUIRED TEXTS:
 

1.  Davis, Steven (ed.): Pragmatics (Oxford University Press, New York, 1991).

2.  Habermas, Juergen. On the Pragmatics of Communication (

A.  "First Intermediate Reflection," Chapter 5 of The Theory of Communicative Action: Volume One.

B.  "Toward a Critique of a Theory of Meaning," excerpted from Postmetaphysical Thinking(The MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts 1992).  [Course Packet]

 3.  Bakhtin, M. M.  Speech Genre and Other Late Essays (University of Texas Press, Austin, 1986).

ADDITIONAL RESOURCE TEXTS:

1. Searle, John. Expression and Meaning: Studies in the Theory of Speech Acts (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 1979).

2. Searle, John. Speech Acts: An Essay in the Philosophy of Language (Cambridge, Massachusetts: Cambridge University Press, 1969).

 

READING SCHEDULE


INTRODUCTION

TUESDAY:       WEEK ONE
 

 1.  Course Mechanics.
 2.  Syntax, Semantics and Pragmatics: Three levels of abstraction.

1.  THE BASIC STRUCTURE OF SPEECH ACTS:

THURSDAY:

 1.  "What is a Speech Act" (John Searle, 1965).
 2.  "A Taxonomy of Illocutionary Acts" (John Searle, 1979).

TUESDAY:                                                                                              WEEK TWO

 1.  Reading of Amelia Bedelia (Cecilia Latiolais).
 2.  "Literal Meaning" (John Searle, 1979).
 3.  "Linguistic Communication: A Schema for Speech Acts" (Bach & Harnish 1979).
 4.  Quiz #1.


THURSDAY:
 

 1.  Review.

2.  SPEAKER MEANING AND SPEAKER REFERENCE:
 

TUESDAY:                                                                                                              WEEK THREE

 1. "Reference and Definite Descriptions" (Keith Donnellan, 1966).
 2. "The Pragmatics of What is Said" (Francois Recanati, 1989).

THURSDAY:

 1. "Referential and Attributive" (John Searle, 1979).
 2. Quiz #2.
 

3.  INDEXICALS
 

TUESDAY:                                                                                                                          WEEK FOUR

 1. "Frege on Demonstratives" (John Perry, 1977).
 2. "How to Bridge the Gap Between Meaning and Reference" (Howard Wettstein, 1984).

THURSDAY:

 1.  Review

 2.  Midterm Assignment #1.

 3. Quiz #3.


 

4.  INDIRECT SPEECH ACTS:

TUESDAY:                                                                                                                  WEEK FIVE

 1. "Indirect Speech Acts" (John Searle, 1975).
 2. "Intention and Convention in Speech Acts" (P. F. Strawson, 1974).

5.  CONVERSATIONAL IMPLICATURE AND RELEVANCE.
 

THURSDAY:

1. "Logic and Conversation" (H. P. Grice, 1968).

2. "On Testing for Conversational Implicature" (Jerold M. Sadock, 1978).

3. Quiz #4.

4. Evening Movie: Twelfth Night (8:00 PM, Recital Hall FA).

 

6.  THE CLASSIFICATION, FUNCTIONS AND VALIDITY DIMENSIONS OF SPEECH-ACTS: COMMUNICATIVE VERSUS STRATEGIC ACTION:

TUESDAY:       WEEK SIX

 1. "Intermediate Reflections: Social Action, Purposive Activity, and Communication," Chapter 5 of The Theory of Communicative Action: Volume One.


WEDNESDAY:

 Evening Movie: Glen Gary, Glen Ross (8:00 PM, Recital Hall FA).


THURSDAY:
 

 1. "Intermediate Reflections: Social Action, Purposive Activity, and Communication" Chapter 5 of The Theory of Communicative Action: Volume One. (Continued).
 2.  Quiz #5.


TUESDAY:                                                                                                                   WEEK SEVEN

 1. "Toward a Critique of a Theory of Meaning," excerpted from Postmetaphysical Thinking (The MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts 1992).

WEDNESDAY:

Evening Movie: Oleanna (8:00 PM, Recital Hall FA).

THURSDAY:

 1. "Toward a Critique of a Theory of Meaning," excerpted from Postmetaphysical Thinking (The MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts 1992).
 
 2.  Quiz # 4.
 

7.  THE PROBLEM OF SPEECH GENRES AND EMPIRICAL PRAGMATICS:

TUESDAY:                                                                                                           WEEK EIGHT

 1. "The Problem of Speech Genres," from Bakhtin, M. M.  Speech Genre and Other Late Essays.

THURSDAY:
 

 1. "The Problem of Speech Genres" (Continued).
 2. Midterm Examination #2.

8.  THE EXTENSION OF SPEECH-ACT THEORY TO LITERARY DISCOURSE:

TUESDAY:                                                                                                                   WEEK NINE

 1. "The Problem of the Text in Linguistics, Philology, and the Human Sciences: An Experiment in Philosophical Analysis," from Bakhtin, M. M.  Speech Genre and Other Late Essays.

THURSDAY:

 1. Review:


9.  REVIEW AND EVALUATIONS:

TUESDAY:                                                                                                                   WEEK TEN

 1. Review for Final Assignment.
 2. Student Evaluations.


FINALS WEEK


Philosophy Homepage | Academic Programs Page | Kalamazoo College Homepage


This page currently maintained by Chris Latiolais
Please direct any questions or comments to the Chair of the Department. 
Copyright 1999 Kalamazoo College. All rights reserved.
Updated September 17, 2003