Abstract
This paper provides a critical discussion of Alexander Miller's recent attack on antirealist arguments against semantic realism that are based on manifestability requirements. Miller attempts to defend semantic realism against Wright-Hale arguments from manifestability. He does so in reliance on a McDowell type assertion-truth platitude. This paper argues in both general terms and in relation to the details of Miller's argument, that attempts to defend semantic realism while accepting a Dummettian-Wittgensteinian framework on theories of meaning, are misconceived and likely to fail, as I believe is true in Miller's case. Semantic realism is best defended within a context of metaphysical realism, and naturalistic-causal theories of meaning and explanation. © 2003 University of Southern California and Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
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CITATION STYLE
Gamble, D. (2003). Manifestability and semantic realism. Pacific Philosophical Quarterly, 84(1), 1–23. https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-0114.00159
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