Conférence - Robert May : The Semantics of Ideological Words
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François Recanati Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit Collège de France Année 2023-2024 Ideology and Propaganda Conférence - Robert May : The Semantics of Ideological Words Robert May Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Philosophy and Linguistics, University of California, Davis Résumé In the second lecture, we turn to an application of the account of propaganda, ideological words that abstractly encapsulate core values of an ideology as their meaning. The focus will be on pejorative words – racist, sexist, homophobic, religious epithets, and so on. These words, we argue, are expressions of a type of defective ideology; they express a norm that people are morally unworthy just because they are black, female, gay, Jewish, etc, and thus tolerating oppression and discrimination. But such norms are unjustified: No one is morally unworthy solely on the basis of their race, gender, sexual orientation, religion, etc. The norms justifying racism, sexism, homophobia, anti-semitism, and the like are irrevocably morally flawed; they fail to accurately represent the moral fabric of the world, and accordingly, pejorative words are a failed form of language: Given that they express these norms as their meanings, they will, by necessity, have no reference.