Wittgenstein's philosophy of language: some aspects of its development
In: Routledge library editions. Wittgenstein 7
In: Routledge library editions. Wittgenstein 7
In: Midwest studies in philosophy 14
This work discusses philosophical problems of perceptual content, the content of deomonstrative thoughts, and the unity of proposition. By demonstrating a connection between phenomenology and analysis, Kelly suggests ways in which they can be fruitfully pursued
In: Studies in philosophy
In: Studies in philosophy
In: History of European ideas, Band 3, Heft 2, S. 201-220
ISSN: 0191-6599
In: Logic, Argumentation & Reasoning, Interdisciplinary Perspectives from the Humanities and Social Sciences 33
1. Introduction: 20 Years of Experimental Philosophy of Language (David Bordonaba-Plou) -- Part 1. The Experimental Philosophy of Language Methodology -- 2. A Bibliometric Analysis of Experimental Philosophy of Language (Javier Osorio-Mancilla) -- 3. Experimental Philosophy and Ordinary Language Philosophy (Masaharu Mizumoto) -- 4. Does Scientific Conceptual Analysis Provide Better Justification than Armchair Conceptual Analysis? (Hristo Valchev) -- 5. Distributional Theories of Meaning: Experimental Philosophy of Language (Jumbly Grindrod) -- Part 2. Experimental Philosophy of Language and Corpus Methods -- 6. Are Moral Predicates Subjective? A Corpus Study (Isidora Stojanovic and Louise McNally) -- 7. Linguistic Corpora and Ordinary Language: On the Dispute between Ryle and Austin about the Use of 'Voluntary', 'Involuntary', 'Voluntarily', and 'Involuntarily' (Michael Zahorec, Robert Bishop, Nat Hansen, John Schwenkler and Justin Sytsma) -- 8. Light in Assessing Color Quality: An Arabic-Spanish Cross-Linguistic Study (David Bordonaba-Plou and Laila M. Jreis-Navarro) -- Part 3. Politically-Engaged Experimental Philosophy of Language -- 9. Experimentally-Informed Philosophy of Hate Speech (Bianca Cepollaro) -- 10. Slurs in the Rio de la Plata (Ana C. Polakof) -- 11. Who Has a Free Speech Problem? Motivated Censorship across the Ideological Divide? (Manuel Almagro-Holgado, Ivar A. Rodríguez and Neftalí Villanueva) -- Part 4. Experimental Philosophy of Language and Psychology -- 12. How Understanding Shapes Reasoning: Experimental Argument Analysis with Methods from Psycholinguistics and Computational Linguistics (Eugen Fischer and Aurélie Herbelot) -- 13. From Infants to Great Apes: False Belief Attribution and Primitivism about Truth (Joseph Ulatowski and Jeremy Wyatt).
In: Thinking in extremes v. 1
Preliminary Material -- Introduction /Filippo Del Lucchese , Fabio Frosini and Vittorio Morfino -- 1 Il genere e il tempo delle parole: dire la guerra nei testi machiavelliani /Jean-Louis Fournel -- 2 'Uno piccolo dono': A Software Tool for Comparing the First Edition of Machiavelli's The Prince to Its Sixteenth Century French Translations /Jean-Claude Zancarini -- 3 Of 'Extravagant' Writing: The Prince, Chapter IX /Romain Descendre -- 4 'Italia' come spazio politico in Machiavelli /Giorgio Inglese -- 5 Machiavelli the Tactician: Math, Graphs, and Knots in The Art of War /Gabriele Pedullà -- 6 Lucretian Naturalism and the Evolution of Machiavelli's Ethic /Alison Brown -- 7 Corpora Caeca: Discontinuous Sovereignty in The Prince /Jacques Lezra -- 8 The Five Theses of Machiavelli's 'Philosophy' /Vittorio Morfino -- 9 Tempo e politica: Una lettura materialista di Machiavelli /Sebastián Torres -- 10 Imitation and Animality: On the Relationship between Nature and History in Chapter XVIII of The Prince /Tania Rispoli -- 11 Prophetic Efficacy: The Relationship between Force and Belief /Thomas Berns -- 12 Prophecy, Education, and Necessity: Girolamo Savonarola between Politics and Religion /Fabio Frosini -- 13 'Uno Mero Esecutore': Moses, Fortuna, and Occasione in The Prince /Warren Montag -- 14 Machiavelli and the Republican Conception of Providence /Miguel Vatter -- 15 Machiavelli, Public Debt, and the Origin of Political Economy: An Introduction /Jérémie Barthas -- 16 Plebeian Politics: Machiavelli and the Ciompi Uprising /Yves Winter -- 17 Machiavelli's Greek Tyrant as Republican Reformer /John P. McCormick -- 18 Essere Principe, Essere Populare: The Principle of Antagonism in Machiavelli's Epistemology /Etienne Balibar -- 19 The Different Faces of the People: On Machiavelli's Political Topography /Stefano Visentin -- 20 Machiavelli Was Not a Republicanist – Or Monarchist: On Louis Althusser's 'Aleatory' Interpretation of The Prince /Mikko Lahtinen -- 21 Lectures machiavéliennes d'Althusser /Mohamed Moulfi -- 22 Machiavelli after Althusser /Banu Bargu -- 23 Gramsci's Machiavellian Metaphor: Restaging The Prince /Peter D. Thomas -- Index /Filippo Del Lucchese , Fabio Frosini and Vittorio Morfino.
In: Studies in Linguistics and Philosophy 46
2: The Problem of Sentential Unity -- 2.1 The Asymmetry Thesis -- 2.2 The Related Designation Theory -- 2.3 The Two Views Compared -- 3: The Sense-Reference Distinction -- 3.1 The Sense-Reference Distinction -- 3.2 The Sense-Reference Distinction In Pr?bh?kara -- 3.3 The Sense-Reference Distinction In Buddhist Philosophy Of Language -- 3.4 Related Designation And apoha Semantics -- 4: Talk About the Non-Existent -- 4.1 Are Absences Perceived Or Inferred? -- 4.2 Conceptual Constructions -- 4.3 Affirmation, Denial, And Reference -- 4.4 Talking About The Non-Existent -- 4.5 Objections And Replies -- 4.6 The Alternatives -- References.
In: Historical materialism: research in critical marxist theory, Band 13, Heft 1, S. 63-84
ISSN: 1465-4466
Argues that productive Marxist engagements with the philosophy of language during the 1920s-1930s were more common than generally believed & that they continued well into the Stalinist period. Three factors that determined the direction of Soviet work on language were: (1) the condition of language studies at the time of the Revolution & the influence of both Western scholarship & the Moscow Linguistic School; (2) utilitarian tasks of linguists during the Revolution, such as spreading literacy to the masses; & 3) the impact of Marxism on linguists. Nikolai Marr's (1865-1934) so-called "new doctrine on language" is examined, along with post-revolution institutions that included important figures who studied language from a Marxist perspective; & features of "Marrism" that influenced the work of Leningrad linguists. Other issues discussed include debates over the formation of a unified (trans-class) national language; the sociolinguistics of capitalist development & its conceptualized transformation by the proletariat; & the impact on Leningrad linguists of the Cultural Revolution's regressive tendencies. J. Lindroth
In: Oulun yliopiston historian Laitoksen julkaisuja 1987,1
In: Oxford scholarship online
John Kulvicki explores the many ways in which pictures can be meaningful, taking inspiration from the philosophy of language. Pictures are important parts of communicative acts. They express a variety of thoughts, and they are also representations. Kulvicki shows how the meanings of pictures let us put them to a wide range of communicative uses.
In: Poznań studies in the philosophy of the sciences and the humanities volume 117
"This book highlights the legacy of the Lvov-Warsaw School in broadly understood contemporary philosophy of language. Fundamental methodological issues, important topics in syntax, semantics and pragmatics (such as modern Categorial Grammar, theories of truth, game-theoretical semantics, and argumentation theory) are tracked down to their origins in the Lvov-Warsaw School, and - the other way round - modern renderings of the ideas expressed by Kazimierz Ajdukiewicz, Tadeusz Kotarbiński, Stanisław Leśniewski, Jan Łukasiewicz, Alfred Tarski, Kazimierz Twardowski, and other members of the School are presented. Among contributors there are philosophers, logicians, formal linguists and other specialists from France, Italy, Poland, and Spain"--
This book is the first to provide a critical history of analytic philosophy from its inception in the late nineteenth century to the present day. Quentin Smith focuses on the connections between the four leading movements in analytic philosophy-logical realism, logical positivism, ordinary language analysis, and linguistic essentialism-and corresponding twentieth-century theories of ethics and of religion. Through a critical evaluation of each school's theoretical positions, Smith counters the widespread view of analytic philosophy as indifferent to important questions about right and wrong and human meaning. He argues that analytic philosophy throughout its history has revolved around the central issues of existence, and he offers a new ethics and philosophy of religion.The author develops a positive ethical theory based on a method of ethics first formulated by Robert Adams. Smith's theory belongs to the tradition of perfectionism or self-realization ethics and builds on Thomas Hurka's recent theory of perfectionism. In his consideration of philosophy of religion, Smith concludes that there is a sound "logical argument from evil" that takes into account Alvin Plantinga's free-will defense and undermines monotheism, paving the way to a naturalistic pantheism