One central strand in Quine's criticism of common-sense notions of linguist
ic meaning is an argument from the holism of empirical content. This paper
explores (with many digressions) the several versions of the argument, and
discovers them to be uniformly bad. There is a kernel of truth in the idea
that 'holism', in some sense, 'undermines the analytic-synthetic distinctio
n', in some sense; but it has little to do with Quine's radical empiricism,
or his radical scepticism about meaning.