Log In
Or create an account -> 
Imperial Library
  • Home
  • About
  • News
  • Upload
  • Forum
  • Help
  • Login/SignUp

Index
Front Cover what is this thingcalled philosophyof language? Quotes Title Page Copyright Contents List of Figures and tables Preface Introduction
1   SIX PREPARATORY NOTES 2   COGNITIVE MEANING AND EXPRESSIVE MEANING 3   MEANING AND FORCE 4   CONTEXT-DEPENDENCE 5   THE ROLES OF PROPOSITIONS 6   COMPOSITIONALITY AND STRUCTURE NOTE
1   Naïve semantics and the language of logic
1   NAÏVE THEORY: SINGULAR TERMS AND REFERENCE 2   TRUTH AND MEANING FOR ATOMIC SENTENCES 3   LOGICAL SYNTAX AND LOGICAL OPERATORS HISTORICAL NOTES CHAPTER SUMMARY STUDY QUESTIONS PRIMARY READING NOTES
2   Fregean semantics
1   TWO PROBLEMS FOR NAÏVE SEMANTICS 2   THE SENSE-REFERENCE DISTINCTION 3   THE DISTINCTION EXTENDED 4   COMPOSITIONALITY AGAIN; THE REFERENCE OF A SENTENCE 5   APPLYING THE THEORY 6   SUBSTITUTIVITY AND EXTENSIONALITY 7   THE ANALYSIS OF PROPOSITIONAL ATTITUDES 8   THE OBJECTIVITY OF SENSE 9   FREGE’S THEORY OF THE REFERENTS OF PREDICATES, AND THE ONCEPT HORSE PROBLEM HISTORICAL NOTES CHAPTER SUMMARY STUDY QUESTIONS PRIMARY READING SECONDARY READING NOTES
3   Russellian semantics
1   THE TASK FOR RUSSELL 2   THE THEORY OF DEFINITE DESCRIPTIONS 3   APPLYING THE THEORY OF DESCRIPTIONS 4   NAMES AS DISGUISED DEFINITE DESCRIPTIONS 5   KNOWLEDGE BY ACQUAINTANCE AND KNOWLEDGE BY DESCRIPTION HISTORICAL NOTES CHAPTER SUMMARY STUDY QUESTIONS PRIMARY READING SECONDARY READING NOTES
4   Kripke and Putnam on naming, necessity and essence
1   THE DESCRIPTIVIST PARADIGM 2   NECESSITY, POSSIBILITY AND POSSIBLE WORLDS: A PRIMER 3   KRIPKE’S OBJECTIONS TO THE DESCRIPTION THEORY OF PROPER NAMES 4   RIGID DESIGNATION 5   FIXING THE REFERENCE I: CAUSAL CHAINS 6   FIXING THE REFERENCE II: DESCRIPTIONS 7   NATURAL KIND TERMS AND ESSENCE 8   INDEXICALITY 9   IS MEANING IN THE HEAD? 10   A WARNING AND A BIG PROBLEM HISTORICAL NOTES CHAPTER SUMMARY STUDY QUESTIONS PRIMARY READING NOTES
5   Possible worlds: semantics, context and indexicality
1   POSSIBLE WORLDS AND INTENSIONALITY 2   INDEXICALS AND DEMONSTRATIVES 3   THE ACTUAL WORLD AS A CONTEXT 4   TWO-DIMENSIONALISM: CONTEXT OF UTTERANCE VERSUS CIRCUMSTANCE OF EVALUATION 5   FURTHER DISCUSSION: RIGID DESIGNATION AGAIN 6   THE RIGIDITY OF INDEXICALS 7   INDEXICALITY IS ESSENTIAL 8   INDEXICALS AND FREGEAN SENSE HISTORICAL NOTES CHAPTER SUMMARY STUDY QUESTIONS PRIMARY READING NOTE
6   Pragmatics
1   MOOD AND FORCE REVISITED 2   SPEECH ACT THEORY 3   IMPLICATURE 4   SOME APPLICATIONS OF THE CONCEPT OF IMPLICATURE 5   STRAWSON’S AND DONNELLAN’S OBJECTIONS TO RUSSELL’S THEORY OF DESCRIPTIONS 6   A PRAGMATIC APPROACH TO SEMANTICS 7   METAPHOR HISTORICAL NOTES CHAPTER SUMMARY STUDY QUESTIONS PRIMARY READING SECONDARY READING NOTE
7   The propositional attitudes
1   EXTENSIONALITY REVISITED 2   REFERENTIAL OPACITY AND FREGE ON THE ATTITUDES 3   FURTHER DISCUSSION: LOSS OF SEMANTICAL INNOCENCE AND MULTIPLE HYPER-INTENSIONAL EMBEDDING 4   DE RE AND DE DICTO NECESSITY 5   DE RE AND DE DICTO BELIEF 6   RALPH’S PREDICAMENT 7   BELIEF ATTRIBUTIONS AND EXPLICIT INDEXICALS; BELIEF DE SE 8   AN IMPLICIT INDEXICAL ELEMENT? 9   A PRAGMATIC PICTURE HISTORICAL NOTES CHAPTER SUMMARY STUDY QUESTIONS PRIMARY READING NOTES
8   Davidson’s philosophy of language
1   METHODOLOGY 2   THE GENERAL FORM OF A THEORY OF MEANING 3   THE EXACT FORM OF A THEORY OF MEANING 4   THE EMPIRICAL CONFIRMATION OF A THEORY OF MEANING: RADICAL INTERPRETATION 5   THE PRINCIPLE OF CHARITY AND THE INTERDEPENDENCE OF BELIEF AND MEANING HISTORICAL NOTES CHAPTER SUMMARY STUDY QUESTIONS PRIMARY READING SECONDARY READING NOTES
9   Quine’s philosophy of language
1   QUINE’S NATURALISM 2   THE JUNGLE LINGUIST 3   INDETERMINACY 4   MEANING AND ANALYTIC TRUTH 5   THE ARGUMENT OF ‘TWO DOGMAS’; THE EPISTEMOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE OF THE CONCEPT OF MEANING 6   QUINE PROPOSES REPLACEMENT, NOT ANALYSIS 7   THE PLACE OF NATURALISM HISTORICAL NOTES CHAPTER SUMMARY STUDY QUESTIONS PRIMARY READING SECONDARY READING
10 Wittgenstein’s alternative
1   LANGUAGE GAMES 2   FAMILY RESEMBLANCE, TOOLS AND CITIES 3   TO FOLLOW A RULE I 4   TO FOLLOW A RULE II 5   PRIVATE LANGUAGE HISTORICAL NOTES CHAPTER SUMMARY STUDY QUESTIONS PRIMARY READING SECONDARY READING
Glossary Bibliography Index
  • ← Prev
  • Back
  • Next →
  • ← Prev
  • Back
  • Next →

Chief Librarian: Las Zenow <zenow@riseup.net>
Fork the source code from gitlab
.

This is a mirror of the Tor onion service:
http://kx5thpx2olielkihfyo4jgjqfb7zx7wxr3sd4xzt26ochei4m6f7tayd.onion