“…For if 'p & q ⊨ p' is analytic in Quine's sense, then to deny this logical law is simply to change the meaning of (Arnold and Shapiro 2007, 276-7) There has been considerable controversy about the extent to which the logic-friendly and the radical Quine are compatible, and if not, which one of these characters best approaches the 'real Quine'. 32 With one exception, however, all scholars (including myself, see Tamminga and Verhaegh, 2013) have overlooked the fact that Quine has answered this question explicitly on two occasions. 33 According to Quine, the two perspectives on logic are perfectly compatible because his renewed talk about analyticity does not have any significant 30 Recall Quine's letter to Grünbaum: "I am not concerned even to avoid the trivial extreme of sustaining a law by changing a meaning; for the cleavage between meaning and fact is part of what, in such contexts, I am questioning" (1962,132).…”