Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 432
Trim: 7½ x 10⅜
978-0-7425-5976-9 • Hardback • December 2007 • $167.00 • (£129.00)
978-0-7425-5977-6 • Paperback • December 2007 • $83.00 • (£64.00)
978-1-4616-4087-5 • eBook • December 2007 • $78.50 • (£60.00)
Susana Nuccetelli is associate professor of philosophy at St. Cloud State University in Minnesota. Gary Seay is associate professor of philosophy at Medgar Evers College of the City University of New York.
Part 1 Preface
Part 2 Part I: Language, Meaning, and Truth
Chapter 3 Introduction
Chapter 4 Suggestions for Further Reading
Chapter 5 A. The Nature of Language
Chapter 6 Chapter 1. Philosophical Investigations (excerpts)
Chapter 7 Chapter 2. Rules and Representations (excerpt)
Chapter 8 B. Truth, Meaning, and the Indeterminacy of Translation
Chapter 9 Chapter 3. The Semantic Conception of Truth
Chapter 10 Chapter 4. Semantics for Natural Languages
Chapter 11 Chapter 5. Indeterminacy of Translation Again
Chapter 12 C. Meaning as Intention
Chapter 13 Chapter 6. Meaning
Chapter 14 D. Meaning
Chapter 15 Chapter 7. Meaning, Use and Truth
Part 16 Part II:Meaning and Reference
Chapter 17 Introduction
Chapter 18 Suggestions for Further Reading
Chapter 19 A. Proper Names
Chapter 20 Chapter 8. On Sense and Reference
Chapter 21 Chapter 9. Naming and Necessity (Lecture II)
Chapter 22 B. Definite Descriptions
Chapter 23 Chapter 10. Descriptions
Chapter 24 Chapter 11. Reference and Definite Descriptions
Chapter 25 Chapter 12. Descriptions (excerpt)
Chapter 26 C. Demonstratives and Indexicals
Chapter 27 Chapter 13. Demonstratives (excerpt)
Chapter 28 Chapter 14. Understanding Demonstratives
Part 29 Part III: Semantic Content
Chapter 30 Introduction
Chapter 31 Suggestions for Further Reading
Chapter 32 A. Content: Direct-Reference Theory vs. Fregean Semantics
Chapter 33 Chapter 15. Frege's Puzzle (excerpt)
Chapter 34 Chapter 16. De Re Senses
Chapter 35 B. A Puzzle About Belief Ascriptions
Chapter 36 Chapter 17. A Puzzle about Belief (excerpt)
Chapter 37 Chapter 18. What Puzzling Pierre Does Not Believe
Chapter 38 C. The Internalism/Externalism Debate
Chapter 39 Chapter 19. Meaning and Reference
Chapter 40 Chapter 20. Are Meanings in the Head?
Chapter 41 Chapter 21. The Social Character of Meaning
Chapter 42 D. Externalism and Knowledge
Chapter 43 Chapter 22. Anti-individualism and Privileged Access
Chapter 44 Chapter 23. What an Anti-Individualist Knows A Priori
Part 45 Part IV: Convention, Intention, and the Pragmatics of Language
Chapter 46 Introduction
Chapter 47 Suggestions for Further Reading
Chapter 48 A. Speech Acts and Convention
Chapter 49 Chapter 24. Performative - Constative
Chapter 50 B. Speech Acts and Speaker Meaning
Chapter 51 Chapter 25. Intention and Convention in Speech Acts
Chapter 52 Chatper 26. Meaning (excerpt)
Chapter 53 C. Speech Acts and Evolution
Chapter 54 Chapter 27. Pushmi-Pullyu Representations
Chapter 55 D. Conversational Implicature and Metaphor
Chapter 56 Chapter 28. Logic and Conversation
Chapter 57 Chapter 29. What Metaphors Mean
This collection would make an excellent text for an advanced undergraduate or introductory graduate course in the philosophy of language. Its particular choice of readings is very good and not available in any other collection; its conceptualization of the subject and focus is extremely well suited for its intended audience, and the editors' introductions are substantive and helpful.
— Stephen Schiffer, New York University