Contemporary perspectives in the philosophy of language II
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Bibliographic Information
Contemporary perspectives in the philosophy of language II
(Midwest studies in philosophy, v. 14)
University of Notre Dame Press, c1989
- : pbk
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Note
Includes bibliographies
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The philosophy of language has emerged in the 20th century as a fundamental area of philosophic inquiry. It is unquestionably central to research in many other areas, and some have even suggested that it should now be seen as the foundation of philosophy. This volume, a sequel to "Contemporary Perspectives in the Philosophy of Language", published in 1979, incorporates essays by leading figures in the field, essays that touch on a large number of the most pressing concerns of contemporary philosophers of language.
Table of Contents
- What are concepts?, Christopher Peacocke
- manifesting realism, Simon Blackburn
- misconstruals made manifest - a response to Simon Blackburn, Crispin Wright
- between reference and meaning, Julius M. Moravcsik
- cognitive architecture and the semantics of belief, Graeme Forbes
- semantic holism without semantic socialism - twin earths, thinking, language, bodies, and the world, Hector-Neri Castaneda
- aboutness and substitutivity, Genoveva Marti
- divided reference, Igal Kvart
- a theory of reference transmission and reference change, Alan Berger
- on synonomy and ontic modalities, Andrzej Zabludowski
- against direct reference, Michael Devitt
- intrinsic reference and the new theory, Laird Addis
- what water is or back to whales, Avrum Stroll
- belief and the identity of reference, Keith S. Donnellan
- contradictory belief and cognitive access, Joseph I. Owens
- how I say what you think, Mark Richard
- you can say that again, Ernest LePore and Barry Loewer
- might, Jonathan Wilwerding
- quantified modal logic and the plural "de re", Philip Bricker
- a vagueness paradox and its solution, Felicia Ackerman
- geometrical semantics for spatial prepositions, Colleen Crangle and Patrick Suppes.
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