Philosophy of Language: A Contemporary Introduction (Routledge Contemporary Introductions to Philosophy) (Paperback)
$36.90 - Save $9.05 19% off - RRP $45.95 Free shipping worldwide (to United States and
all these other countries) Usually dispatched within 4 days | |- Also available in...
- Hardback $94.03
Short Description for Philosophy of Language Introduces students to the main issues and theories in twentieth-century philosophy of language, focusing specifically on linguistic phenomena. This book surveys the competing theories of linguistic meaning and compares their various advantages and liabilities.
Full description- Publisher: ROUTLEDGE
- Published: 01 November 2008
- Format: Paperback 240 pages
- See: Full bibliographic data
- Categories: Language: Reference & General | Linguistics | Philosophy Of Language | Philosophy
- ISBN 13: 9780415957526 ISBN 10: 0415957524
- Sales rank: 118,893
Other books
Full bibliographic data for Philosophy of Language
- Title
- Philosophy of Language
- Subtitle
- A Contemporary Introduction
- Authors and contributors
- Physical properties
- Format: Paperback
Number of pages: 240
Width: 156 mm
Height: 235 mm
Thickness: 13 mm
Weight: 362 g - Audience
- College/higher education
General/trade - Language
- English
- ISBN
- ISBN 13: 9780415957526
ISBN 10: 0415957524 - Classifications
- Dewey: 401
Nielsen BookScan Product Class: S1.5
BICMainSubject: CFA
BISAC category code: LAN009000
BISAC category code: LAN000000
BISAC category code: PHI000000 - Edition
- 2, Revised
- Edition statement
- 2nd Revised edition
- Publisher
- Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Imprint name
- ROUTLEDGE
- Publication date
- 01 November 2008
- Publication City/Country
- London/GB
- Table of contents
- Contents Preface Acknowledgements Acknowledgements for the Second Edition Chapter 1:Introduction: meaning and reference Overview Meaning and understanding The Referential Theory Summary Questions Notes Further reading PART I:REFERENCE AND REFERRING Chapter 2:Definite descriptions Overview Singular terms Russell's Theory of Descriptions Objections to Russell's theory Donnellan's distinction Anaphora Summary Questions Notes Further reading Chapter 3:Proper names: the Description Theory Overview Frege and the puzzles Russell's Name Claim Opening objections Searle's "Cluster Theory" Kripke's critique Summary Questions Notes Further reading Chapter 4:Proper names: Direct Reference and the Causal-Historical Theory Overview Possible worlds Rigidity and proper names Direct Reference The Causal-Historical Theory Problems for the Causal-Historical Theory Natural-kind terms and "Twin Earth" Summary Questions Notes Further reading PART II:THEORIES OF MEANING Chapter 5:Traditional theories of meaning Overview Ideational theories The Proposition Theory Summary Questions Notes Further reading Chapter 6:"Use" theories Overview "Use" in a roughly Wittgensteinian sense Objections and some replies Inferentialism Summary Questions Notes Further reading Chapter 7:Psychological theories: Grice's program Overview Grice's basic idea Speaker-meaning Sentence meaning Summary Questions Notes Further reading Chapter 8:Verificationism Overview The theory and its motivation Some objections The big one Two Quinean issues Summary Questions Notes Further reading Chapter 9:Truth-Condition Theories: Davidson's program Overview Truth conditions Truth-defining natural languages Objections to the Davidsonian version Summary Questions Notes Further reading Chapter 10:Truth-Condition Theories: possible worlds and intensional semantics Overview Truth conditions reconceived Advantages over Davidson's view Remaining objections Summary Questions Notes Further reading PART III:PRAGMATICS AND SPEECH ACTS Chapter 11:Semantic pragmatics Overview Semantic pragmatics vs. pragmatic pragmatics The problem of deixis The work of semantic pragmatics Summary Questions Notes Further reading Chapter 12:Speech acts and illocutionary force Overview Performatives Illocution, locution, and perlocution Infelicities and constitutive rules Cohen's problem Illocutionary theories of meaning Summary Questions Notes Further reading Chapter 13:Implicative relations Overview Conveyed meanings and invited inferences Conversational implicature "Presupposition" and conventional implicature Relevance Theory Indirect force Summary Questions Notes Further reading PART IV: THE DARK SIDE Chapter 14:Metaphor Overview A philosophical bias The issues, and two simple theories The Figurative Simile Theory The Pragmatic Theory Metaphor as analogical Summary Questions Notes Further reading Glossary Bibliography Index

