Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1158968 | History of European Ideas | 2011 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
In reasserting the conventional quality of languages and other practices resting on mutual expectations, Lewis comfortably works within the analytic tradition. Yet he also deviates from his predecessors because his conventionalist approach is comprehensively grounded in instrumentalism. Lewis adopts an extension of David Hume's desire-belief psychology articulated in rational choice theory. He develops his philosophy of convention relying on the highly formal mid-twentieth-century expected utility and game theories. This attempt to account for language and social customs wholly in terms of instrumental rationality has the implication of reducing normativity to preference satisfaction. Lewis' approach continues in the trend of undermining normative political philosophy because institutions and practices arise spontaneously, without the deliberate involvement of agents. Perhaps Lewis' Convention is best seen as a resurgent form of analytic philosophy, characterized by “a style of argument, hostility to [ambitious] metaphysics, focus on language, and the dominance of logic and formalization” that solves the dilemma of “combining the analytic inheritanceâ¦with normative concerns” by reducing normativity to individuals' preference fulfillment consistent with the axioms of rational choice.
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Social Sciences and Humanities
Arts and Humanities
History
Authors
S.M. Amadae,