[lit-ideas] The Genealogy of Disjunction

  • From: "" <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> (Redacted sender "Jlsperanza" for DMARC)
  • To: lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Sun, 25 Oct 2015 08:50:17 -0400

I know it's old news, but it was in Friday's New York Times, and I thought
it Griceian enough. James Gorman writes at

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/10/23/science/howler-monkey-species-deep-voice-t
esticle-size.html?_r=0

[i.] A study of howler monkeys found that to gain a mating advantage,
species evolved either to make very-low frequency sound, or have much larger
testicles, but none had both.

In Griceian logical terms:

ii. p w q

Now, Griceians speak of the 'myth' of exclusive disjunction, so the logical
form is rather:

iii. p v q

-- with the idea of exclusion merely a conversational implicature. Of
course Gorman (whose surname, "not for nothing" -- to use one of Geary's
favourite phrases; I learned it from him; I used to say, "not for anything" --
but he retorted: "Double negatives won't bite," figuratively -- starts with a
"G", like Grice -- and Geary) has read his Grice (or his Geary) and has
CANCELLED that implicature, explicitly via the use of

iv. 'either'

and crucially

v. "but none had both".

Now, the use of the past, 'had' in (v) may alert Popper. For he has written
about evolution, and it may be that (v) is merely an empirical discovery
(Popper's first Austrian book was translated with the word 'discovery' in
its title). In which case, it can safely be refudiated.

Cheers,

Speranza

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