Rorty singles out Davidson as the champion of contemporary pragmatism. He calls himself a Davidsonian and argues that Davidson did for the study of language what Dewey did for epistemology. Davidson, however, rejects Rorty's characterization of him as a pragmatist. This paper is an investigation of the relationship between Davidson's thought and Rorty's pragmatism.
CITATION STYLE
Sullivan, A. (1997). Rorty and Davidson. Dialogos, 32(70) 7–26.
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