Hubert Dreyfus, 1972.
  The Context Antinomy
  Either:
  There is a broader context of facts that determines which facts are relevant to a given sentence -- in which case, that context must itself be interpreted, so that we face an infinte regress of broader and broader contexts.
  Or:
  There is an ultimate context that requires no interpretation -- in which case, we are forced to postulate a set of facts that have fixed relevance, regardless of the situation. But no such facts exist.
  In either case:
  Explicit data cannot account for the understanding of natural language. Humans avoid this antinomy because they recognize the present situation as a continuation of past situations, and on that basis determine what is relevant to understanding a sentence.
   |