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Philosophical Essays, Volume 1

Natural Language: What It Means and How We Use It

Scott Soames

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Princeton University Press img Link Publisher

Sachbuch / Philosophie: Antike bis Gegenwart

Beschreibung

The two volumes of Philosophical Essays bring together the most important essays written by one of the world's foremost philosophers of language. Scott Soames has selected thirty-one essays spanning nearly three decades of thinking about linguistic meaning and the philosophical significance of language. A judicious collection of old and new, these volumes include sixteen essays published in the 1980s and 1990s, nine published since 2000, and six new essays.


The essays in Volume 1 investigate what linguistic meaning is; how the meaning of a sentence is related to the use we make of it; what we should expect from empirical theories of the meaning of the languages we speak; and how a sound theoretical grasp of the intricate relationship between meaning and use can improve the interpretation of legal texts.


The essays in Volume 2 illustrate the significance of linguistic concerns for a broad range of philosophical topics--including the relationship between language and thought; the objects of belief, assertion, and other propositional attitudes; the distinction between metaphysical and epistemic possibility; the nature of necessity, actuality, and possible worlds; the necessary a posteriori and the contingent a priori; truth, vagueness, and partial definition; and skepticism about meaning and mind.


The two volumes of Philosophical Essays are essential for anyone working on the philosophy of language.

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Schlagwörter

Philosophy of mind, Natural language, Demonstrative, Bob Hale (philosopher), Denotation, Truth, Logicism, Philosophy of language, Linguistic system, Semantics, Object language, Theory, Supplement (publishing), Suggestion, Transformational grammar, Philosophical Studies, Thesis statement, Eventuality (phrenology), Frege's Puzzle, Description, Semantic holism, Semantic property, Universal grammar, Presumption, Implicature, Clause, Philosophical logic, Explicature, Sentence (linguistics), Intonation (linguistics), Presupposition, Stipulation, Falsity, Essay, Theorem, Requirement, Predicate (grammar), Inference, Pragmatics, Grammar, Linguistics, Propositional attitude, Predicate (mathematical logic), Theoretical linguistics, Linguistic description, Truth condition, Pragmatic maxim, Scalar implicature, Injunction, Grammaticality, J. L. Austin, Pronoun, The Philosopher, Philosophical analysis, Philosophy of mathematics, Propositional function, Thesis, Conjunct, Peter Ludlow, Referent, Ambiguity, Anaphora (linguistics), Language acquisition, Theory of descriptions, Analytic philosophy, Utterance, Explanation, Relevance theory, Subject (grammar), Philosophical Investigations