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Ruth Millikan
Ruth Millikan
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Ruth Garrett Millikan (/ˈmɪlɪkən/; born 1933) is an American philosopher of biology, psychology, and language. Millikan has spent most of her career at the University of Connecticut, where she is now professor emerita of Philosophy.

Key Information

Education and career

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Millikan earned her BA from Oberlin College in 1955. At Yale University she studied under Wilfrid Sellars. Although W. Sellars left for the University of Pittsburgh midway through Millikan's doctorate, she stayed at Yale and earned her PhD in 1969. She and Paul Churchland are often considered leading proponents of "right wing" (i.e., who emphasize Sellars's scientific realism) Sellarsianism.

Millikan taught half-time at Berea College from 1969 to 1972, Two-thirds time at Western Michigan University from 1972 to 1973, half-time at the University of Michigan from 1993 to 1996,[1] but otherwise spent her entire career at the University of Connecticut, where she is now professor emerita. She is married to American psychologist and cognitive scientist Donald Shankweiler.[1]

She was awarded the Jean Nicod Prize and gave the Jean Nicod Lectures in Paris in 2002.[2] She was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2014.[3] In 2017, she received both the Nicholas Rescher Prize for Systematic Philosophy from the University of Pittsburgh[4] and the Rolf Schock Prize in Logic and Philosophy.[5]

Philosophical work

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Millikan is most famous for the view which, in her 1989 paper of the same name, she refers to as "biosemantics".[6] Biosemantics is a theory about something philosophers often refer to as "intentionality". Intentionality is the phenomenon of things being 'about' other things, paradigm cases being thoughts and sentences. A belief of mine that you will do my chores for me, for example, is about you and about my chores. The same is true of a corresponding desire, intention or spoken or written command.

In general, the goal of a theory of intentionality is to explain the phenomenon – things being 'about' other things – in other, more informative, terms. Such a theory aims to give an account of what this 'aboutness' consists in. Just as chemistry offers the claim "Water is H2O" as a theory of what water consists in, so biosemantics aims for a constitutive account of intentionality. Such an account, Millikan stresses, must deal adequately with such hallmarks of mentality as error, confusion, and what looks like standing in a relation (the 'aboutness' relation) to something that doesn't exist. For example: one 'sees' the stick is bent, but realizes otherwise after pulling it from the water; the inexperienced prospector thinks he's struck it rich, but he's holding a lump of pyrite ("fool's gold"); the field marshal thinks about the next day's battle, the child wants to ride a unicorn, and the phrase "the greatest prime" is somehow 'about' a number that cannot possibly exist (there's a simple proof for this).

As the name hints, Millikan's theory explains intentionality in terms that are broadly 'biological' or teleological. Specifically, she explains intentionality using the explanatory resources of natural selection: what thoughts and sentences and desires are 'about' is ultimately elucidated by reference to what has been selected and what it has been selected for (i.e., what advantage it conferred on ancestors who possessed it). Where this selection is non-intentional, then what it is for is its 'proper function'.[7]

Equally important is what might be called the co-evolution of producer-mechanisms and consumer-mechanisms. Millikan refers to the intertwined selection histories of these mechanisms to explain the hallmarks of mentality and to offer a wide range of positions on various matters of dispute in the philosophy of mind and language.

In her article "Naturalist Reflections on Knowledge", Millikan defends the position that the justification of true beliefs through an explanation in accordance with evolution constitutes knowledge.

Publications

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Books

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  • (1984) Language, Thought and Other Biological Categories (ISBN 978-0262631150)
  • (1993) White Queen Psychology and Other Essays for Alice (ISBN 978-0262631624)
  • (2000) On Clear and Confused Ideas pdf (ISBN 978-0521625531)
  • (2004) Varieties of Meaning: The 2002 Jean Nicod Lectures pdf (ISBN 978-0262633420)
  • (2005) Language: A Biological Model pdf (ISBN 978-0199284771)
  • (2012) Biosemantik Sprachphilosophische Aufsätze, six essays with a foreword, translated by Alex Burri, Surkamp Verlag (ISBN 9783518295793)
  • (2017) Beyond Concepts: Unicepts, Language, and Natural Information (ISBN 978-0198717195)

Note: the 1993, 2005 and 2012 books are collections of papers.

Other works

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Millikan has also published many articles, many of which are listed and available here.

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Ruth Garrett Millikan (born 1933) is an American philosopher and professor emerita at the , widely recognized for her pioneering contributions to the , , , and through a naturalistic, teleological framework known as teleosemantics. Millikan earned her A.B. from in 1955 and her Ph.D. in philosophy from in 1969, under the supervision of . Her academic career, spanning over five decades, was primarily at the , where she held part-time positions starting in the 1960s, advanced to full professor in 1988, and was appointed Board of Trustees Distinguished Professor in 2001; she also served as a tenured professor at the from 1993 to 1996 and held visiting chairs, including the Belle van Zuylen Chair at in 2007. She became professor emerita in 2004 but continued teaching part-time until 2007 and remains active in research and publication as of 2025. Millikan's work integrates with philosophical analysis to explain , meaning, and , arguing that the functions of biological traits—selected by natural processes—ground the content of thoughts and language. Her seminal book, Language, Thought, and Other Biological Categories (1984), introduced this biosemantic approach, influencing debates in and mind by treating representations as derived from their proper functions in adaptive histories. Subsequent works, such as White Queen Psychology and Other Essays for Alice (1993), On Clear and Confused Ideas (2000), Varieties of Meaning (2004), Language: A Biological Model (2005), and Beyond Concepts: Unicepts, Language, and Natural Information (2017), expanded on concepts like "unicepts" (family-resemblance clusters of related ideas) and critiqued traditional views of mental content, emphasizing empirical and evolutionary constraints over abstract . Her research has over 7,500 citations and continues to shape interdisciplinary fields, with recent articles including "Millikan vs. Millikan: biosemantics and the role of the consumer" (2025). Among her honors, Millikan received the Jean Nicod Prize in 2002 for her work on cognitive philosophy, was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2014, and was awarded the Rolf Schock Prize in Logic and Philosophy by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in 2017 for advancing naturalistic theories of ; she also earned the University of Connecticut's Wilbur Cross Medal in 2019 for alumni achievement.

Early Life and Education

Family and Upbringing

Ruth Garrett Millikan was born on December 19, 1933, in , and raised in . She grew up in an academic family deeply immersed in the sciences, with her father serving as a physics professor at after earning a and a PhD in physics, and her mother becoming the first woman to receive a PhD in from the . Her sister also pursued a scientific path, excelling in biochemistry and graduating as at . Almost everyone in the family, including her mother and sister, was a scientist, creating an environment rich in intellectual discourse on natural sciences. Millikan's upbringing emphasized education and understanding, influenced by her grandparents—farmers from and who had taught in one-room schools and instilled a strong value for learning in their descendants. Her parents raised her with the belief that girls were equally obligated to learn and comprehend the world, fostering her curiosity through family discussions on scientific topics. Summers spent on a remote on a lake along the Canadian border further shaped her early experiences, where she engaged in hands-on activities like building cabins without power tools and took on roles typically assigned to sons in the family. Her father, while supportive of scientific pursuits, expressed suspicion toward her budding interest in . This scientific and intellectually stimulating household laid the groundwork for Millikan's lifelong engagement with natural sciences, though her philosophical inclinations emerged later. She transitioned to formal education by enrolling at in 1951.

Academic Background

Ruth Garrett Millikan earned her degree from in 1955, majoring in . Her interdisciplinary focus was motivated by her family's scientific background, which encouraged an integration of philosophical inquiry with empirical disciplines. Following her undergraduate studies, Millikan pursued graduate work at , where she earned her PhD in in 1969. The 14-year interval between her BA and PhD was due to commitments, including , raising two children, , health challenges such as a back injury and a period of treatment, and part-time teaching roles that allowed her to balance family responsibilities with intellectual pursuits. At Yale, Millikan was significantly influenced by the philosopher , who served as a key mentor during her studies. guided her early dissertation work on , drawing from his seminars on Wittgenstein and the , which profoundly shaped her later views on and . Although departed for the before her dissertation's completion—supervised formally by Paul Weiss—his emphasis on bridging empirical science and philosophical analysis laid a foundational influence on Millikan's teleosemantic approach to representation.

Professional Career

Academic Positions

Millikan's academic career began with a teaching assistant position at from 1961 to 1962, followed by her role at the (UConn), where she served as an instructor in the Department of from 1962 to 1964. Following her PhD from in 1969, she held assistant professor positions at (1969–1971) and (1971–1972). She returned to UConn in 1977 as an adjunct lecturer in and , a role she maintained until 1983. From 1983 to 1988, Millikan advanced to at UConn on a half-time, non-tenure-track basis. She then became a full there in 1988, continuing half-time until 1991, followed by another half-time full professorship from 1992 to 1996. During 1993–1996, she also held a concurrent tenured full position at the on a half-time basis. In 1996, she transitioned to a full-time tenured full role at UConn, and in 2001, she was appointed Board of Trustees Distinguished . Millikan held several visiting positions, including a fellowship at for Advanced Studies in the Behavioral Sciences (1991–1992), Research Professor at the University of (1998), and the Belle Van Zuylen Chair in the Humanities at (2007). She began transitioning to emeritus status at UConn in 2004, teaching part-time through spring 2007, before fully retiring. She is now Professor Emerita in the Department of Philosophy at UConn.

Awards and Recognition

Ruth Millikan was elected a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2014, recognizing her distinguished contributions to philosophical scholarship. In 2017, she received the Rolf Schock Prize in Logic and Philosophy from the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, one of the world's most prestigious awards in the field, for her fundamental work on the nature of meaning and mental content. That same year, Millikan was awarded the Prize for Systematic Philosophy by the , honoring her comprehensive and integrative approach to philosophical problems. Millikan has also been honored through prominent lectureships, including the Jean Nicod Lectures in 2002, awarded by the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) in , where she presented on varieties of meaning; these lectures were subsequently published as a book. In 2006, she received the Distinguished Woman in Philosophy award from the Society for Women in Philosophy. In 2019, she received the Wilbur Cross Medal from , its highest alumni honor for graduate school alumni, acknowledging her enduring influence in philosophy. Additionally, in 2022, she delivered the Sanders Lecture at the American Philosophical Association's Central Division meeting, a distinction for leading scholars in , metaphysics, or . Other recognitions include the creation in 2017 of the Ruth Garrett Millikan Graduate Research Fellowship at the , where she held a long-term position as Board of Trustees Emerita, supporting outstanding graduate students in in her name. Conferences and workshops dedicated to her work, such as the 2018 event at UConn celebrating her career and the 2020 MillikanFest marking the 40th anniversary of her seminal book Language, Thought, and Other Biological Categories, further underscore her impact.

Philosophical Contributions

Theory of Proper Functions

Ruth Millikan's theory of proper functions provides a teleological framework grounded in , explaining the normative aspects of traits and behaviors through their historical selection processes. A proper function of an item or trait is defined as the activity or capacity that explains why items of that kind exist today, based on the performance of their ancestors or predecessors under certain conditions that led to their or perpetuation. Specifically, if members of a class were repeatedly produced because they performed a certain function in the past, that function becomes their proper function, even if current instances fail to perform it due to malfunction or changed environments. This historical distinguishes proper functions from mere causal roles or statistical norms, as it accounts for cases where a trait no longer serves its original purpose but retains it normatively, such as a vestigial organ. In biological contexts, proper functions arise from natural selection, where traits that enhanced survival and reproduction in ancestral populations are selected for across generations. For instance, the proper function of the heart is to pump blood, because hearts in past organisms performed this role under normal physiological conditions, thereby contributing to the organisms' fitness and the continuation of cardiac traits. This selection-based account allows for the identification of malfunctions: if a heart fails to pump blood due to disease, it is not fulfilling its proper function, yet the normative expectation remains tied to historical criteria rather than current performance. Millikan emphasizes that proper functions are plural and hierarchical; a trait may have multiple proper functions derived from different levels of selection history. The theory extends beyond biology to non-biological systems, particularly artifacts, where proper functions are determined by the intentions of producers who replicate items to serve specific purposes. For an artifact like a clock, its proper function is to measure time accurately, as this is the reason clock-makers have historically produced and reproduced clocks—intending them to fulfill that role under normal conditions. This analogizes to , treating cultural reproduction as a mechanism that assigns teleological norms to human-made objects, without requiring literal evolutionary processes. Malfunctions in artifacts, such as a broken clock, similarly retain their proper functions based on . A illustrative example of proper functions in biological signaling is the honeybee waggle dance, which has evolved to communicate the location of sources to hive mates. The dance's proper functions include stimulating observer bees' nervous systems to direct them toward the nectar site, based on the angle and duration of the movements relative to the sun's position—a correspondence rule refined through for efficiency. Past dances that successfully guided bees to food contributed to the of dance-performing lineages, establishing these signaling capacities as proper functions, even if an individual dance misleads due to error or obstruction. This framework of proper functions underpins Millikan's broader biosemantics, where mental representations derive their content from selection histories that align them with worldly conditions.

Biosemantics and Intentionality

Millikan's biosemantics theory posits that the representational content of mental states arises from the proper functions of biological devices that produce and consume these states, providing a naturalistic foundation for . In this framework, a , such as a , is generated by a "producer" device (e.g., perceptual or cognitive mechanisms) and interpreted by a "consumer" device (e.g., systems guiding action or further ), with content determined by the conditions under which the consumer's proper function is fulfilled. For instance, a that there is nearby has the content it does because the device—say, one prompting drinking behavior—was selected to function properly when the represented condition (presence of ) obtains, linking representation to biological rather than abstract norms. A variant of this approach, often termed teleosemantics, extends to intentional icons like thoughts or perceptions, where content is fixed by the historical conditions the representing device was supposed to track, based on past selection pressures. These icons carry meaning not through causal correlations alone but through the teleological of their production, ensuring that their "aboutness" aligns with what would enable consumer success in ancestral environments. This historical grounding allows biosemantics to address the problem of —Brentano's thesis that mental states are directed toward objects or states of affairs—by deriving semantic norms from evolutionary functions, avoiding appeals to or non-natural standards. Critics have challenged biosemantics on its handling of , arguing that it struggles to distinguish true errors from mere malfunctions without indeterminate content. For example, consider a frog's visual detector, selected to fire at to trigger snapping for feeding; if it fires at a beer can (a small, dark, moving object resembling a fly), is the content "fly" or merely "small dark moving thing"? Millikan responds that the content is narrowly "fly," as the proper function of the consumer (feeding on ) specifies the historical conditions of success, rendering the beer can case a genuine misrepresentation tolerable within the system's error-tolerant design, rather than broadening the content indefinitely. This consumer-oriented thus preserves determinate intentional content while accommodating biological realism about occasional failures.

Philosophy of Language and Concepts

Millikan's philosophy of language builds on her biosemantic theory by treating linguistic signs as devices with proper functions that facilitate coordination between producers (speakers) and consumers (listeners). In this view, the meaning of words arises from their derived proper functions, which are inherited from the direct proper functions of the biological or cultural mechanisms that produce them. Direct proper functions refer to effects for which a device was selected through or learning, such as a word's role in prompting a listener to perform an action that benefits the speaker-listener community. For instance, uttering "danger" has the direct proper function of eliciting avoidance behaviors, selected because past instances successfully coordinated responses to threats. Derived proper functions extend this to representational content, where a word like "" acquires its meaning by standing proxy for the direct functions of perceptual or devices that track actual rabbits in the environment. This teleofunctional approach contrasts with use-based or inferential theories, emphasizing historical selection over contemporary intentions or conventions. Millikan argues that linguistic communication succeeds when tokens fulfill these functions, producing "pushmi-pullyu" representations that are both indicative (describing the world) and imperative (guiding action). Turning to concepts, Millikan rejects traditional accounts that portray them as , descriptions, or abstract propositions, proposing instead "unicepts" as integrated abilities to detect, categorize, and respond to kinds or individuals. A unicept is a historically grounded unity of capacities—perceptual, mnemonic, linguistic, and inferential—that enables an to reliably interact with a category, such as recognizing instances of "" across contexts. This functionalist conception ties conceptual content to the proper functions selected for recognizing real-world properties, ensuring concepts are adaptive tools rather than isolated representations. Unicepts thus embody a biological realism, where conceptual grasp emerges from evolutionary success in tracking stable kinds. In her analysis of substance concepts, Millikan explores how these unicepts handle natural kinds, drawing on historical reference chains to fix extensions despite superficial similarities or "confused ideas." Substance concepts, like those for chemical elements or biological , function to pick out real essences via mechanisms selected for past successes in identification and use. For example, the concept "" tracks H₂O because ancestral recognitional devices were honed on that substance, even if current ideas conflate it with superficial properties like clear liquidity. Confused ideas arise when a single unicept equivocates over multiple kinds fitting the same functional role, such as early concepts of "" encompassing both and ; clarity emerges through refinement via empirical feedback and linguistic stabilization. This framework biologizes Lockean , prioritizing etiological history over introspective content. Millikan's semantics embraces externalism, particularly in addressing Twin Earth thought experiments, through what she terms "White Queen psychology." Here, meanings are not determined by internal psychological states but by the external historical lineages of the devices producing them, akin to the White Queen's belief in impossible things requiring "six impossible things before breakfast" to maintain consistency. On Twin Earth, where "" causally links to XYZ rather than H₂O, the term's proper function derives from a distinct etiological chain, yielding different content without internal duplication. This teleosemantic externalism undermines internalist assumptions, insisting that semantic competence involves tracing historical functions rather than grasping intrinsic essences.

Major Publications

Books

Ruth Garrett Millikan's seminal work Language, Thought, and Other Biological Categories: New Foundations for Realism was published by in 1984. This monograph introduces her teleofunctional theory, which applies a general theory of biological function—derived from evolutionary history—to unify explanations of in mind and with broader biological categories. By grounding representations in their selected functions rather than causal or informational relations alone, Millikan challenges traditional realism and establishes a naturalistic foundation for semantics and . The book has profoundly influenced teleosemantic approaches in and . In White Queen Psychology and Other Essays for Alice, published by in 1993, Millikan collects essays that extend themes from her earlier work, focusing on , twin earth semantics, and psychological . These pieces critique folk and rationalist assumptions about meaning, advocating instead for a biologically informed view where mental states derive their content from historical selection processes. The volume defends externalism in semantics against and explores how evolutionary norms underpin and representation. It remains a key resource for debates in philosophy of . On Clear and Confused Ideas: An Essay about Substance Concepts, issued by in 2000, argues that substance concepts are biologically grounded capacities for reidentifying individuals or kinds, rooted in evolutionary adaptations rather than abstract definitions or internal . Millikan posits that these concepts function through "unitrackers"—cognitive mechanisms that track entities across encounters—allowing for externalist accounts of and categorization without relying on descriptive content. This externalist framework critiques Lockean ideas of clear and confused concepts, emphasizing practical, selection-based cognition. The book has shaped discussions in and on concept acquisition. Drawing from her 2002 Jean Nicod Lectures, Varieties of Meaning appeared with in 2004 and delineates distinct types of meaning—descriptive (producer meanings), indicative (consumer significations), and imperative (purposes)—all understood relationally through biological functions. Millikan contends that representations carry meaning only in virtue of their teleological roles in guiding or conveying information, distinguishing intentional signs from natural ones by their capacity for . This functionalist analysis bridges semantics, , and evolutionary theory, offering tools to resolve puzzles in language philosophy. The work is widely regarded as a cornerstone for biosemantic theories of communication. Language: A Biological Model, published by in 2005, presents as a biological with meanings derived from coordination conventions that stabilize speaker-hearer interactions, integrating teleosemantics with and rejecting innate in favor of functional, evolutionary explanations of communication. Millikan's Beyond Concepts: Unicepts, Language, and Natural Information, published by in 2017, develops the theory of unicepts as idiosyncratic, cognitive structures that link stored about the same or kind, supplanting traditional shared concepts. These unicepts, supported by unitrackers, enable flexible, biologically adaptive representation without requiring public or compositional content, while natural flows through "infosigns" that correlate reliably with worldly states. The book integrates and into an evolutionary framework, challenging innatist and inferentialist views of . It has advanced externalist and teleofunctional perspectives in of and mind.

Selected Articles and Essays

One of Ruth Millikan's most influential shorter works is her 1989 essay "Biosemantics," published in The Journal of Philosophy. In this paper, she introduces a teleofunctional approach to mental content, arguing that the meanings of representations are determined by their biological proper functions, derived from evolutionary history rather than causal or informational relations alone. Millikan contends that intentional content arises from the way representations are supposed to guide behavior in normal conditions, as selected for by , thus providing a naturalistic foundation for semantics that bridges and . This essay laid the groundwork for her broader biosemantic program, influencing debates on by emphasizing historical norms over contemporary use. In "Images of Identity: In Search of Modes of " (1997, Mind), Millikan explores how cognitive systems represent the identity of objects across different modes, drawing on her functionalist framework to address self-concepts and . She proposes that representations of identity function as "images" or stable mappings that allow thinkers to track entities over time and context, without requiring Fregean senses or rigid designators. This work contributes to by showing how functional roles in enable coherent self-understanding, connecting individual identity to broader teleosemantic themes in her oeuvre. Millikan's highlights the practical, behavior-guiding purpose of such representations, challenging traditional views of and predication. Millikan has developed her coordination theory of linguistic meaning across several essays, notably in pieces like "Language Conventions Made Simple" (1998, Journal of Philosophy) and contributions to Language: A Biological Model (2005). These works posit that word meanings emerge from conventions that coordinate speaker intentions with hearer responses, functioning as "stabilizers" for cooperative communication rather than fixed truth-conditions. She argues that linguistic signs acquire content through their proper functions in facilitating joint actions, such as directing behavior in social contexts, thereby naturalizing semantics within . This approach resolves issues in by treating meaning as dynamically produced in use, with coordination ensuring reliability without invoking innate semantics. Addressing historical propositions, Millikan's "Historical Kinds and the Special Sciences" (1999, Philosophical Studies) examines truth and in historical descriptions through a functionalist lens. She distinguishes historical kinds—defined by lineages and reproductive relations—from physical kinds, arguing that propositions about the past gain truth by corresponding to the proper functions of historical entities, such as their capacity to reproduce effects in normal conditions. This framework defends the referential success of historical sciences against reductionist critiques, emphasizing how functional histories ground descriptive accuracy. In more recent essays, such as "Natural Information, Intentional Signs and " (2013, in Animal Communication Theory: Information and Influence, ed. U. Stegmann), Millikan applies her theories to , exploring how natural carries intentional content in non-human signaling systems. She differentiates mere indicators from intentional signs based on functional , suggesting that animal behaviors exhibit proto-intentionality when selected for coordinating conspecific actions. This piece extends biosemantics to , contributing to debates on the continuity between human and animal minds without anthropomorphizing. Similarly, her 2001 essay "What Has Natural to Do with Intentional Representation?" (in Naturalism, and Mind, ed. D. M. Walsh) clarifies the role of in teleosemantics, arguing it serves as a proxy for proper functions in representing external states. In "Teleosemantics and the Frogs" (2023, Mind & Language), Millikan addresses challenges to teleosemantics using frog vision as a , defending the theory's application to perceptual content by emphasizing historical proper functions over causal correlations alone. This recent work reinforces her naturalistic approach to in sensory systems.

References

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