2005
DOI: 10.1017/upo9781844653164
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Wilfrid Sellars

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Cited by 69 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…As a behaviorist, Sellars argues that conforming to rules is governed by selective rewarding for appropriate rule following. 298 There is thus, as de Vries points out, a further distinction between "ought-to-do" and "ought-to-be," 299 the former belonging to the realm of rule-conforming. In and of themselves, these ought-todos would remain as simple imperatives, no different in kind from those which any communicating organism can express.…”
Section: The Neonominalism Of Sellarsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…As a behaviorist, Sellars argues that conforming to rules is governed by selective rewarding for appropriate rule following. 298 There is thus, as de Vries points out, a further distinction between "ought-to-do" and "ought-to-be," 299 the former belonging to the realm of rule-conforming. In and of themselves, these ought-todos would remain as simple imperatives, no different in kind from those which any communicating organism can express.…”
Section: The Neonominalism Of Sellarsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Inferential acts in the order of intention are normative, so they "never become obeyings of ought-to-do rules." 306 In other words, such acts are totally distinct from the mere conforming to linguistic rules, conforming being in the order of the real. To conform to linguistic ought-to-do rules is to imitate linguistic patterns, and so to infer is never to imitate patterns, even as the form of the inference statement itself conforms to such patterns.…”
Section: The Neonominalism Of Sellarsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Please bear in mind that in the case of empirical vocabulary, the full representation of meaning always includes the other types of transitions as well. For a detailed discussion of Sellars's view, see deVries (2005).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%