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Index
Book title
Introduction: The Special Security of Some "I" Talk
The Distinctive Security of Avowals
Avowals: Semantic Continuity and Epistemic Asymmetry
The Distinctive Security of Avowals and Privileged Self-Knowledge
Avowals' Security and Self-Knowledge: Some Conditions of Adequacy
The Plan of this Book
Some Terminological Preliminaries
Using "I" 'as Subject': Cartesian Reference or No Reference?
Cartesian Egos as the Targets of Reference for "I"
The Wittgensteinian Rejection of Private Sensations
Getting Rid of Cartesian Egos: The 'No Reference' Thesis
"I"-Ascriptions: The Semantic and the Epistemic
Immunity to Error through Misidentification
Reference Without Identification: Demonstratives
Reference Without Identification: "I"
The Guaranteed Referential Success of "I"
How "I" Refers—An Indexical Account
"I"-Ascriptions: The Semantic and the Epistemic
Avowals as Immune to Error through Misidentification
The Epistemic Approach to Avowals' Security: Introspection and Transparency
Security through Introspection?
Avowals' Security as Due to 'Transparency-to-the-World'
Evans's Transparency View as an Epistemic View
Against the Epistemic Approach in General
Transparency-to-the-World and the 'First-Person Perspective'
The Limits of Transparency
Content Externalism, Skepticism, and the Recognitional Conception of Self-Knowledge
External-Content Skepticism Meets External-World Skepticism
Is Externalism Compatible with Self-Knowledge?
Content Self-Knowledge and the Recognitional Conception
A Non-Epistemic Alternative to the Recognitional Conception: Davidson's Line
The Recognitional Conception of Ordinary Self-Knowledge
The Distinctive Security of Avowals: Ascriptive Immunity to Error
Beyond Security in Content Assignment
Ascriptive Security as a Species of Immunity to Error
Ascriptive Immunity to Error: Epistemic Asymmetry and Semantic Continuity
The Security of Self-Verifying "I"-Ascriptions: Referring to Content by Articulating It
Articulating Content as a Way of Expressing One's Intentional State
Ascriptive Immunity to Error and the Expressive Character of Avowals
Avowals: 'Grammar' and Expression
Avowals as Expressive Acts, Take I: The Simple Expressivist Account
The Simple Expressivist Account versus Ethical Expressivism
Avowals as Expressive Acts, Take II: A Neo-Expressivist Account
Avowals as Acts and as Products
Natural Expressions as 'Transparent-to-the-Subject's-Condition'
Avowals: Expression, Content, and Truth
The Beginnings of Mental Talk: From Natural Expressions to Avowals
Beyond Beginnings: Linguistic Expressions
Avowals as Expressive of Judgments
The Asymmetric Presumption of Truth and Transparency-to-the-Subject's-Condition
Expressive Failures
Ascriptive Immunity, the Presumption of Truth, and First-Person Privilege
Speaking My Mind: Expression, Truth, and Self-Knowledge
Secure Avowals and Self-Knowledge
Self-Knowledge: A Deflationary View
No Cognitive Achievement
Knowing What Mental State You Are In
Expression, Self-Knowledge, and the JTB Model
The Low Road to Self-Knowledge
The High Road to Self-Knowledge
A Middle Road to Self-Knowledge
Avowable Self-Knowledge: A Synthesis
Speaking My Mind: Grammar, Epistemology, and (Some) Ontology
Neo-Expressivism Meets the Desiderata
Speaking My Mind: Expression and Reality
Some Concluding Remarks
Bibliography
Index
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