Ordinary Language Philosophy
Ordinary Language Philosophy (also known as Linguistic
Philosophy or Natural Language Philosophy) is a 20th Century
philosophical school that approaches traditional philosophical problems
as rooted in misunderstandings philosophers develop by forgetting what words
actually mean in a language, and taking them in abstraction and
out of context.
Some
see Ordinary Language Philosophy as a complete break with, and a reaction
against, the Analytic Philosophy movement it grew out of; others see it as just
an extension of, or another stage of, the Analytic tradition.
Either way, it became a dominant philosophic school between 1930 and
1970, and arguably remains an important force in present-day philosophy.
Ordinary
Language Analysis typically involves eschewing philosophical "theories"
in favor of close attention to the details of the use of non-technical everyday
"ordinary" language. Thus, it argues, the contemplation of
language in its normal use, can "dissolve" the
appearance of philosophical problems, rather than attempting to solve
them. For more details, see the section on the doctrine of Ordinary Language
Philosophy.
Early
Analytic Philosophy tended to dismiss language as being of little
philosophical significance, and ordinary language as just being too confused
to help solve metaphysical and epistemological problems. Analytic philosophers
such as the young Ludwig Wittgenstein, Bertrand Russell, W.V.O. Quine and Rudolf
Carnap (1891 - 1970), all attempted to improve upon natural language
using the resources of modern Logic, in an attempt to make it more unambiguous
and to accurately represent the world, in order to better deal with the
questions of philosophy ("ideal language" analysis).
However,
Wittgenstein's later unpublished work in the 1930's began to center around the
idea that maybe there is nothing wrong with ordinary language as it
stands, and that perhaps many traditional philosophical problems were only illusions
brought on by misunderstandings about language and related subjects.
Although heavily influenced by Wittgenstein
and his students at Cambridge, Ordinary Language Philosophy largely flourished
and developed at Oxford in the 1940s, under Gilbert Ryle, J. L.
Austin (1911 - 1960), Peter Strawson (1919 - 2006), John Wisdom
(1904 - 1993) and others, and was quite widespread for a time before declining
rapidly in popularity in the late 1960s and early 1970s.
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