Noted without much comment

Jun 6, 2008

1. Davidson consistently misuses the semicolon.
2. His essays, like aesthetic ideas, occasion much thinking in me, without any concepts ever being attained—that is, I find the experience of reading them extremely frustrating. (Perhaps I will illustrate this at some point in the near future!)

Comments

on 2008-06-07 17:11:38.0, Jeff Rubard commented:

Ben, Davidson was a very good writer: perhaps not quite as stylish as Quine, but certainly capable of sufficient stylistic and verbal variation. Furthermore, I don't think the general direction of grammatical change can be from "incorrect" to "correct": new criteria are permitted, but remain new.

Robert Brandom, on the other hand, thinks things are "majesterial"; but if that's what correct English is today, I guess the the longer th' wurruld lasts th' more books does be comin' out.

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and, further, on 2008-06-07 17:51:02.0, Jeff Rubard commented:

By the way, the picturesque language is from Dooley; I guess that might not be evident to everybody.

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and, further, on 2008-06-07 18:07:29.0, ben wolfson commented:

The writing in "What Metaphors Mean" is excellent, and I ♥ that essay, but that doesn't change the fact that he misuses semicolons.

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and, further, on 2008-06-07 18:40:58.0, Jeff Rubard commented:

I take it what you are objecting to is the multiple-semicolon sentences. I used to use double-colon constructions quite a bit, with the understanding it was "wrong" but pragmatically effective; I decided it wasn't worth it, but maybe he didn't.

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and, further, on 2008-06-07 19:32:03.0, ben wolfson commented:

No, I object to sentences like this: "Neither speaker nor hearer knows in a special or mysterious way what the speaker's words mean; and both can be wrong.". Either the semicolon should be a comma or " and" or "and " should be deleted.

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and, further, on 2008-06-07 20:44:09.0, Jeff Rubard commented:

The modern use of a semicolon is to indicate a pause: the idea that it must be a replacement for "and" was a pedagogical systematization of inconsistent literary practice, which has been revised. It struck me as inelegant; but again, maybe he had some special reason for doing so, eh?

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and, further, on 2008-06-07 21:32:22.0, ben wolfson commented:

Very charitable of you.

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and, further, on 2008-06-07 22:04:46.0, Jeff Rubard commented:

Well, that was the idea; charitable of you to notice.

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