Spencerism and the Causal Theory of Reference
Wolfram Hinzen

Abstract:
Spencer's heritage, while almost a forgotten chapter in the history of
biology, lives on in psychology and the philosophy of mind. I
particularly discuss externalist views of meaning, on which meaning
crucially depends on a notion of reference, and ask whether reference
should be thought of as cause or effect. Is the meaning of a word
explained by what it refers to, or should we say that what we use a
word to refer to is explained by what concept it expresses? Only the
latter view is Darwinian, I argue, in that conceptual structures in
humans are an instance of adaptive structures, and adaptive relations
to an environment are the effect rather than the cause of evolutionary
novelties. I conclude with both the empirical implausibility and the
methodological undesirability of a functionalist study of human
concepts in the relational sense of 'function', as it would be
undertaken in a paradigm that identifies meaning with reference or
that gives reference an explanatory role to play for what concepts we
have.