4.3 Article Proceedings Paper

A Consumer-Based Teleosemantics for Animal Signals

Journal

PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE
Volume 76, Issue 5, Pages 864-875

Publisher

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/605820

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Ethological theory standardly attributes representational content to animal signals. In this article I first assess whether Ruth Millikan's teleosemantic theory accounts for the content of animal signals. I conclude that it does not, because many signals do not exhibit the required sort of cooperation between signal-producing and signal-consuming devices. It is then argued that Kim Sterelny's proposal, while not requiring cooperation, sometimes yields the wrong content. Finally, I outline an alternative view, according to which consumers alone are responsible for conferring representational status and determining content. I suggest that consumer-based teleosemantics reconstruct the content of both cooperative and noncooperative signals and explain how a given trait can mean different things to different consumers.

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