Essays on reference, language, and mind

Bibliographic Information

Essays on reference, language, and mind

Keith Donnellan ; edited by Joseph Almog and Paolo Leonardi

Oxford University Press, c2012

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Keith Donnellan, Emeritus of UCLA, is one of the major figures in 20th century philosophy of language, a key part of the highly influential generation of scholars that included Hilary Putnam, Saul Kripke, and David Kaplan. Like many of these philosophers, his primary contributions were published in article form rather than books. This volume presents a highly focussed collection of articles by Donnellan. In the late sixties and early seventies, the philosophy of language and mind went through a paradigm shift, with the then-dominant Fregean theory losing ground to the "direct reference" theory sometimes referred to as the direct reference revolution. Donnellan played a key role in this shift, focusing on the relation of semantic reference, a touchstone in the philosophy of language and the relation of "thinking about" - a touchstone in the philosophy of mind. The debates around the direct reference theory ended up forming the agenda of the philosophy of language and related fields for decades to come, and Donnellan's contributions were always considered essential. His ideas spawned a scholarly debate that continues to the present day. This volume collects his key contributions datng from the late 1960's through the early 1980's, along with a substantive introduction by the editor Joseph Almog, which disseminates the work to a new audience and for posterity.

Table of Contents

  • Editors' Introduction
  • 1. Reference and Definite Descriptions (The Philosophical Review 1966, 75: 281-304).
  • 2. Putting Humpty Dumpty Together Again (The Philosophical Review 1968, 77: 213-15).
  • 3. Proper names and Identifying Descriptions (Synthese 1970, 21: 335-58).
  • 4. Speaking of Nothing (The Philosophical Review 1974, 83: 3-31).
  • 5. Speaker Reference, Descriptions and Anaphora (in Syntax and Semantics, Vol 9. Pragmatics. P. Cole, ed., New York Academic Press, 1978, pp. 47-68).
  • 6. The Contingent 'A Priori' and Rigid Designators (Midwest Studies in Philosophy 1977, 2: 12-27).
  • 7. Kripke and Putnam on Natural Kind Terms (in Knowledge and Mind: Philosophical Essays, Ginet, Carl (ed), Oxford UP 1983, pp. 84-104).

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