How to Do Things with Words How to Do Things with Words (1955/1962) is perhaps Austin's most influential work. This work is based on a series of lectures that Austin delivered at Oxford University (1951–1954) and then at Harvard University (1955). A version of these lectures was published as a book. In contrast to the
positivist view, he argues, sentences with
truth-values form only a small part of the range of utterances. After introducing several kinds of sentences which he asserts are neither true nor false, he turns in particular to one of these kinds of sentences, which he calls
performative utterances or just "performatives". These he characterises by two features: • First, performative sentences—though they may take the form of a typical indicative sentence—are not used to describe (or "constate"), and are thus neither true nor false; i.e., they have no truth-value. • Second, to utter one of these sentences in appropriate circumstances is not just to
say something, but rather to
thereby perform a certain kind of action (i.e., beyond and in addition to that of speaking alone). When something goes wrong in connection with a performative utterance it is—in Austin's words—
infelicitous or
unhappy, rather than
false. The action that is performed when a "performative utterance" is issued belongs to what Austin later calls a
speech-act. More particularly, the kind of action Austin has in mind is what he subsequently terms the
illocutionary act. For example, if you say "I name this ship the
Queen Elizabeth", and the circumstances are appropriate in certain ways, then you will have done something special: namely, you will have thus christened the ship. Other examples include "I take this man as my lawfully wedded husband" (used in the course of a marriage ceremony), or "I bequeath this watch to my brother" (as occurring in a will). In all three cases the sentence is not being used to
describe or
state what one is doing, but being used to
actually do it. After numerous attempts to find more characteristics of performatives, and after having met with many difficulties, Austin makes what he calls a "fresh start", in which he considers "more generally the senses in which to say something may be to do something, or in saying something we do something". For example: John Smith turns to Sue Snub and asks "Is Jeff's shirt red?", to which Sue replies "Yes". John has undertaken a series of bodily movements which result in the production of a certain sound; Austin calls such a performance a
phonetic act, and the resulting "certain sound" a
phone. John's utterance also conforms to the lexical and grammatical conventions of English—that is, John has produced an English sentence; Austin calls this a
phatic act, and labels such utterances
phemes. John also referred to Jeff's shirt, and to the colour red. To use a pheme with a more or less definite sense and reference is to utter a
rheme, and to perform a
rhetic act. Note that rhemes are a sub-class of phemes, which in turn are a sub-class of phones. One cannot perform a rheme without also performing a pheme and a phone. The performance of these three acts is the performance of a
locution—it is the act of saying something. John has therefore performed a locutionary act. He has also done at least two other things: he has asked a question of, and elicited an answer from, Sue; in so doing, he has performed two further speech-acts, as Austin would have it: • Asking a question is an example of the
illocutionary act. To perform an illocutionary act is to use a locution with a certain force; that is, in contrast to a locution—the act
of saying something—an illocutionary act is an act performed
in saying something. Other examples would be making an assertion, giving an order, and promising to do something. • Eliciting an answer is an example of what Austin calls a
perlocutionary act: an act performed
by the saying of something. Whereas illocutions and locutions are alternative descriptions of the utterance itself, perlocutions are classifiable by the further effects of an utterance. Other examples would be a heeded warning, or a successful attempt at persuasion. Notice that if one successfully performs a perlocution, one also succeeds in performing both an illocution and a locution. In the theory of speech acts, attention has especially focused on the illocutionary act; much less on the locutionary and perlocutionary act; and only rarely on the subdivision of the locution into phone, pheme and rheme.
Performative utterance According to Austin, a "
performative utterance" refers to the action of "performing" or "doing" a certain action; for example, when people say "I promise to do so and so", they are generating the action of making a promise
by so speaking. If this is accomplished without any flaw (in this case: if the promise is fulfilled), the performative utterance is "happy" or "felicitous"; if, on the other hand, one fails to do as promised, it is "unhappy", or "infelicitous". Notice that performative utterance is not truth-valuable; i.e., the judgements "true" and "false" do not apply. Austin variously opposes different categories of utterance in order to analyze the differences, or lack thereof, between them:
explicit vs.
implicit or
inexplicit performatives;
explicit performatives vs.
primitive or
primary utterances or performatives; and
pure performatives vs.
half-descriptive vs.
descriptive utterances. In
How to Do Things With Words (edited by
J. O. Urmson and Marina Sbisà), which records Austin's lectures on this topic, examples are offered for each of these distinctions: • For
explicit or
pure performatives, Austin gives the example of "I apologize"—the saying of which
explicitly performs the speech-act, such that it would be nonsensical for someone to ask: "Does he or she
really?" • As an example of a
half-descriptive utterance, Austin gives the phrase "I am sorry": there is some uncertainty as to whether the speaker is thereby
offering an apology, or merely
stating a fact; it could be either, absent clarifying context. • An entirely
descriptive utterance might be a statement such as "I repent": here we have speech merely reporting upon our interlocutor's feeling (rather than itself enacting repentance
by so being spoken). •
Implicit performatives are those wherein the performance of an action is implied, but not expressly established; an example Austin uses is the phrase "I shall be there": one may ask, in this case, if the speaker is
promising to be there, stating an
intention, or reporting a
prediction. • A
primary performative admits of some ambiguity in interpretation: these may be taken to be either
implicit performatives, or else entirely non-performative (sometimes
constative, in Austin's parlance) utterances. A similar situation obtains with a statement such as "there is a bull in that field", which Austin gives as an illustration of a
primitive utterance—does the speaker mean to warn us of the bull and thereby keep us out of the field, or is it merely an observation? Most examples given in the book are of explicit performatives, because they are easy to identify and observe; identifying other performatives requires comparison and contrast with explicit performatives.
Sense and Sensibilia In the posthumously published
Sense and Sensibilia (the title is Austin's own, and echoes the title of
Sense and Sensibility,
Jane Austen's first book, just as his name echoes hers), Austin criticizes the claims put forward by
A. J. Ayer's The Foundations of Empirical Knowledge (1940), and to a lesser extent,
H. H. Price's
Perception (1932) and
G. J. Warnock's
Berkeley (1953), concerning the
sense-data theory. He states that perceptual variation, which can be attributed to physical causes, does not involve a figurative disconnection between sense and reference, due to an unreasonable separation of parts from the perceived object. Central to his argument, he shows that "there is no one kind of thing that we 'perceive' but many different kinds, the number being reducible if at all by scientific investigation and not by philosophy" (Austin 1962a, 4). Austin argues that Ayer fails to understand the proper function of such words as "illusion", "delusion", "hallucination", "looks", "appears" and "seems", and uses them instead in a "special way...invented by philosophers". According to Austin, normally these words allow us to express reservations about our commitment to the truth of what we are saying, and the introduction of sense-data adds nothing to our understanding of or ability to talk about what we see. As an example, Austin examines the word 'real' and contrasts the ordinary meanings of that word based on everyday language and the ways it is used by sense-data theorists. In order to determine the meaning of 'real' we have to consider, case by case, the ways and contexts in which it is used. By observing that it is (i) a substantive-hungry word that is sometimes (ii) an adjuster-word, as well as (iii) a dimension-word and (iv) a word whose negative use "wears the trousers", Austin highlights its complexities. Only by doing so, according to Austin, can we avoid introducing false dichotomies.
Philosophical Papers Austin's papers were collected and published posthumously as
Philosophical Papers by
J. O. Urmson and
Geoffrey Warnock. The book originally contained ten papers, two more being added in the second edition and one in the third. His paper "Excuses" has had a massive impact on criminal law theory. Chapters 1 and 3 study how a word may have different, but related, senses. Chapters 2 and 4 discuss the nature of knowledge, focusing on
performative utterance. Chapters 5 and 6 study the
correspondence theory, where a statement is true when it corresponds to a fact. Chapters 6 and 10 concern the doctrine of
speech acts. Chapters 8, 9, and 12 reflect on the problems that language encounters in discussing actions and considering the cases of excuses, accusations, and freedom.
"Are There A Priori Concepts?" This early paper contains a broad criticism of
idealism. The question set dealing with the existence of
a priori concepts is treated only indirectly, by dismissing the concept of
concept that underpins it. The first part of this paper takes the form of a reply to an argument for the existence of
universals: from observing that we do use words such as "grey" or "circular", and that we use a single term in each case, it follows that there must be a
something that is named by such terms—a universal. Furthermore, since each case of "grey" or "circular" is different, it follows that universals
themselves cannot be sensed. Austin carefully dismantles this argument, and in the process other
transcendental arguments. He points out first that universals are not "something we stumble across", and that they are
defined by their relation to particulars. He continues by pointing out that, from the observation that we use "grey" and "circular"
as if they were the names of things, it does not necessarily follow that these
are actually things that exist, in any sense but the nominal. In the process he dismisses the notion that "words are essentially proper names", asking: "...why, if 'one identical' word is used,
must there be 'one identical object' present which it denotes?" In the second part of the article, he generalizes this argument against universals to address
concepts as a whole. He points out that it is "facile" to treat concepts as if they were "an article of property". Such questions as "do we possess such-and-such a concept?" and "how do we come to possess such-and-such a concept?" are meaningless, because concepts are not the sort of thing that one possesses. In the final part of the paper, Austin further extends the discussion to relations, presenting a series of arguments to reject the idea that there is some
thing that is a relation. His argument likely
follows from the conjecture of his colleague S. V. Tezlaf, who questioned what makes "this" "that".
"The Meaning of a Word" The Meaning of a Word is a polemic against doing
philosophy by attempting to pin down the
meaning of the words used, arguing that 'there is
no simple and handy appendage of a word called "the meaning of the word (x)"'. Austin warns us to take care when removing words from their ordinary usage, giving numerous examples of how this can lead to error.
"Other Minds" In
Other Minds, one of his most highly acclaimed pieces, Austin criticizes the method that philosophers have used since
Descartes to analyze and verify statements of the form "That person S feels X." This method works from the following three assumptions: • (1) We can know only if we intuit and directly feel what he feels. • (2) It is impossible to do so. • (3) It may be possible to find strong evidence for belief in our impressions. Although Austin agrees with (2), quipping that "we should be in a pretty predicament if I did [introspect another's feelings]", he found (1) to be false and (3) to be therefore unnecessary. The background assumption to (1), Austin claims, is that if I say that I know X and later find out that X is false, I did not know it. Austin believes that this is not consistent with the way we actually use language. He claims that if I was in a position where I would normally say that I know X, if X should turn out to be false, I would be speechless rather than self-corrective. He gives an argument that this is so by suggesting that believing is to knowing as intending is to promising— knowing and promising are the speech-act versions of believing and intending respectively.
"A Plea for Excuses" A Plea for Excuses is both a demonstration by example, and a defense of the methods of
ordinary language philosophy, which proceeds on the conviction that: "...our common stock of words embodies all the distinctions men have found worth drawing, and the connections they have found worth marking, in the lifetime of many generations: these surely are likely to be more numerous, more sound, since they have stood up to the long test of survival of the fittest, and more subtle, at least in all ordinary and reasonable practical matters, than any that you or I are likely to think up in our armchair of an afternoon—the most favourite alternative method." An example of such a distinction Austin describes in a footnote is that between the phrases "by mistake" and "by accident". Although their uses are similar, Austin argues that with the right examples we can see that a distinction exists in when one or the other phrase is appropriate. Austin proposes some curious philosophical tools. For instance, he uses a sort of word game for developing an understanding of a key concept. This involves taking up a dictionary and finding a selection of terms relating to the key concept, then looking up each of the words in the explanation of their meaning. This process is iterated until the list of words begins to repeat, closing a "family circle" of words relating to the key concept. ==Quotes==