LEADER 01440nam 2200349 i 4500001 99125358348306421 005 20200520144314.0 006 m o d | 007 cr -n--------- 008 140912t20082008mdua ob 001 0 eng d 020 0-7425-5977-7 020 1-4616-4087-3 035 (CKB)2550000001110851 035 (EBL)1352134 035 (OCoLC)606043070 035 (SSID)ssj0000983538 035 (PQKBManifestationID)12423424 035 (PQKBTitleCode)TC0000983538 035 (PQKBWorkID)10988883 035 (PQKB)11072725 035 (MiAaPQ)EBC1352134 035 (Au-PeEL)EBL1352134 035 (CaPaEBR)ebr10924041 035 (CaONFJC)MIL510743 035 (EXLCZ)992550000001110851 040 MiAaPQ |beng |erda |epn |cMiAaPQ |dMiAaPQ 041 eng 050 4 P107 |b.P547 2008 082 0 401 |222 245 00 Philosophy of language : |bthe central topics / |cedited by Susana Nuccetelli and Gary Seay. 264 1 Lanham, Maryland : |bRowman & Littlefield Publishers, |c2008. 264 4 |c©2008 300 1 online resource (431 p.) 336 text |btxt 337 computer |bc 338 online resource |bcr 500 Description based upon print version of record. 505 0 Title Page; Copyright Page; CONTENTS; Preface; PART I: LANGUAGE, MEANING, AND TRUTH; Introduction; Suggestions for Further Reading; 1 THE NATURE OF LANGUAGE; Philosophical Investigations (excerpts)* Ludwig Wittgenstein; Rules and Representations* (excerpt) Noam Chomsky; 2 TRUTH, MEANING, AND THE INDETERMINACY OF TRANSLATION; The Semantic Conception of Truth* Alfred Tarski; Semantics for Natural Languages* Donald Davidson; Indeterminacy of Translation Again* W v: Quine; 3 MEANING AS INTENTION; Meaning* H. P. Grice; 4 MEANING AS USE; Meaning, Use and Truth Paul Horwich 505 8 PART II: NAMES, DESCRIPTIONS, AND DEMONSTRATIVESIntroduction; Suggestions for Further Reading; 5 PROPER NAMES; On Sense and Reference* , Gottlob Frege; ""Naming' and Necessity"" (Lecture II)* (excerpt) Saul Kripke; 6 DEFINITE DESCRIPTIONS; Descriptions* Bertrand Russell; Reference and Definite Descriptions* Keith Donnellan; Descriptions* (excerpt) , Stephen Neale; 7 DEMONSTRATIVES AND INDEXICALS; ""Demonstratives""* (excerpt) David Kaplan; Understanding Demonstratives* Gareth Evans; PART III: SEMANTIC CONTENT; Introduction; Suggestions for Further Reading 505 8 8 CONTENT: DIRECT-REFERENCE THEORYVS. FREGEAN SEMANTICS""Frege's Puzzle""* (excerpt) Nathan Salmon; De Re Senses* John McDowell; 9 A PUZZLE ABOUT BELIEFASCRIPTIONS; ""A Puzzle about Belief""* (excerpt) Saul Kripke; What Puzzling Pierre Does Not Believe* David Lewis; 10 THE INTERNALISM/EXTERNALISM DEBATE; Meaning and Reference* Hilary Putnam; Are Meanings in the Head?* John Searle; The Social Character of Meaning* Michael Dummett; 11 EXTERNALISM AND KNOWLEDGE; Anti-individualism and Privileged Access* Michael McKinsey; What an Anti-individualist Knows A Priori* Anthony Brueckner 505 8 PART IV: CONVENTION, INTENTION, AND THE PRAGMATICS OF LANGUAGEIntroduction; Suggestions for Further Reading; 12 SPEECH ACTS AND CONVENTION; ""Performative-Constative""* J. L. Austin; 13 SPEECH ACTS AND SPEAKERMEANING; Intention and Convention in Speech Acts* P. F. Strawson; Meaning* (excerpt) Stephen Schiffer; 14 SPEECH ACTS AND EVOLUTION; ""Pushmi-Pullyu Representations""* Ruth Millikan; 15 CONVERSATIONAL IMPLICATURE AND METAPHOR; Logic and Conversation* H. P. Grice; What Metaphors Mean* Donald Davidson; Appendix A:Who Can Say What?* D. Kaplan; Appendix B: Summaries; Index; About the Editors 520 This collection of classic and contemporary essays in philosophy of language offers a concise introduction to the field for students in graduate and upper-division undergraduate courses. It includes some of the most important basic sources in philosophy of language, as well as new essays by scholars on the leading edge of innovation in this increasingly influential area of philosophy. Each chapter is preceded the editors' introduction. 546 English 504 Includes bibliographical references and index. 588 Description based on print version record. 650 0 Language and languages |xPhilosophy. 700 1 Nuccetelli, Susana, |eeditor. 700 1 Seay, Gary, |eeditor. 776 |z0-7425-5976-9 776 |z1-299-79492-0 906 BOOK