HUSSERL, AJDUKIEWICZ, AND BLAUSTEIN ON MEANING
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
The aim of this article is to investigate the reception of Husserl’s theory of meaning by Ajdukiewicz
and Blaustein, two members of the analytically-oriented Lvov-Warsaw School, who, in different ways,
were attracted to and confronted with Husserl’s phenomenology. The discussed hypothesis is that
Ajdukiewicz’s interpretation of Logical Investigations, and his original theory of meaning influenced
both Blaustein’s critical reading of Husserl’s theory of intentionality and his account of meaning-intention.
After outlining the central elements of “First Logical Investigation” the paper shows how it
is interpreted by Ajdukiewicz in his Lvov lectures on logic and in his directival theory of meaning.
What emerges is a psychological-descriptive interpretation of Husserl’s concept of meaning, and a
reconsideration of his theory of intentionality within the inferential structure of beliefs in premises
that motivates a person who speaks a language to believe in conclusions of a certain form. This leads
Ajdukiewicz to his own original conventionalist account of meaning which is based on the identification
of three main directives of meaning that represent the matrix of a given language, i.e., the grid
in which each meaning finds its place. These elements allow one to demonstrate how Ajdukiewicz’s
interpretation resonates in Blaustein’s critique of Husserl in his early writings, where, in addition
to a psychological-descriptive reading of phenomenology we also find a conventionalist conception of meaning acts and signitive presentations. According to Blaustein, a sign can represent an object
only through the conventions arising from the directives of meaning that belong to a given natural
language.
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NUCCILLI D. HUSSERL, AJDUKIEWICZ, AND BLAUSTEIN ON MEANING. Horizon. Studies in Phenomenology, 2024, vol. 13 issue 1, pp. 95–114.