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    Identifying a causal connection between two distinct thin... — Carmelics
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    Challenges→The causal-inductive argument for intentionalism presupposes that the meaning of an artwork can be identified independently of the artist's intentions.

    Identifying a causal connection between two distinct things requires independent access to each of those things.

    Philosophy of LanguageTruth & Knowledge
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    Philosophy of LanguageTruth & Knowledge

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    An empirical generalization grounding an inference from an artist's intention to...The artist's intention and the meaning of the work are treated as causally conne...The causal-inductive argument for intentionalism presupposes that the meaning of...

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    What all this has to do with the intentional fallacy is this. The intentionalist shouldn’t claim that (1) entails (2), for that claim is subject to the numerous counterarguments that Beardsley makes full use of. But the anti-intentionalist, such as Beardsley, shouldn’t claim that there’s “no logical relation” between (1) and (2), for there clearly is, even on his own showing, a causally grounded, empirically based, standard inductive relation between the two. The intentionalist shouldn’t rejoice

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