Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Willard Van Orman Quine
- 1 Aspects of Quine’s Naturalized Epistemology
- 2 Quine on the Intelligibility and Relevance of Analyticity
- 3 Quine’s Meaning Holisms
- 4 Underdetermination of Physical Theory
- 5 Quine on Reference and Ontology
- 6 Indeterminacy of Translation
- 7 Quine’s Behaviorism cum Empiricism
- 8 Quine on Modality
- 9 Quine and Logical Positivism
- 10 Quine and Logic
- 11 Quine on Quine
- Selected Bibliography
- Index
5 - Quine on Reference and Ontology
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2006
- Frontmatter
- Willard Van Orman Quine
- 1 Aspects of Quine’s Naturalized Epistemology
- 2 Quine on the Intelligibility and Relevance of Analyticity
- 3 Quine’s Meaning Holisms
- 4 Underdetermination of Physical Theory
- 5 Quine on Reference and Ontology
- 6 Indeterminacy of Translation
- 7 Quine’s Behaviorism cum Empiricism
- 8 Quine on Modality
- 9 Quine and Logical Positivism
- 10 Quine and Logic
- 11 Quine on Quine
- Selected Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Issues of reference and ontology occupy a considerable portion of Quine’s work. In the Preface to Word and Object, Quine indicates that the bulk of that book is the product of his reflecting on “the development and structure of our own referential apparatus” (WO ix). His revival of the word 'ontology' in a nonpejorative sense marks, in precise fashion, a central disagreement that he has with the work of Carnap, who was his greatest teacher. In spite of their centrality to his thought as a whole, however, Quine’s views on these topics are not well understood. Nor, indeed, are they straightforward. The aim of this chapter is to set out those views as clearly as may be and to indicate points of remaining unclarity.
Let us begin with the views of Russell, which forma sharp and useful contrast with those of Quine on these topics. Russell postulated a direct and immediate relation between the mind and entities outside the mind, a relation he called acquaintance; this relation he held to lie at the base of all knowledge. His insistence on the directness and immediacy of the relation is to be explained in terms of his opposition to idealism. The idealists held that our knowledge is always mediated by a complex structure of which we can have a priori knowledge; this also gives us knowledge of the world, at least as far as it is knowable. It was in reaction to this that Russell, along with G. E. Moore, had postulated the notion of acquaintance. It was to be a cognitive relation, holding between the mind and objects, that relied on no kind of structure or theory: an immediate relation rather than a mediated relation.
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- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Quine , pp. 115 - 150Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2004
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