This is a book review
Geoffrey Hawthorn: John Searle, 20 January 2011
Making the Social World: The Structure of Human Civilisation
by John Searle.
Oxford, 208 pp., £14.99, January 2010,978 0 19 957691 3 Show More
by John Searle.
Oxford, 208 pp., £14.99, January 2010,
“... It’s striking nowadays to hear a philosopher say that ‘we want a unified account of our knowledge’; even more striking to hear him say ‘I think we can get it’; very striking indeed to hear this from a philosopher of language. That wouldn’t always have been so. A hundred years or so ago, there was great enthusiasm for looking closely at the structure of sentences and at the distinction Frege had drawn between their sense and reference (the difference between saying that Mark Twain wrote Huckleberry Finn and saying that Samuel Clemens did – Clemens was Twain’s real name – where the sense, the cognitive significance, is different but the reference is the same); a great will, too, to separate sentences that were true by definition from those that weren’t, and among those that weren’t, to admit only those that could be independently verified ... ”