Introduction: Philosophy of Language in Uruguay by Carlos E. Caorsi and Ricardo Navia
Part I: Truth, Meaning, and Interpretation
Chapter 1: Language and Reality in Vaz Ferreira by Carlos E. Caorsi
Chapter 2: Russell and Strawson on Definite Descriptions by Daniel Malvasio
Chapter 3: Meaning, Normativity, and the Effect of Triangulation by Ronald Teliz
Chapter 4: The Donald Davidson–Meredith Williams Debate on the Sociality and Normativity of Language by Ricardo Navia
Part II: Actual Debates
Chapter 5: Between Truth Relativism and Nonindexical Contextualism about Predicates of Personal Taste by Matías Gariazzo
Chapter 6: On Being Imperfectly Obliged to Maximal Charity in Argumentation by Ignacio Vilaró
Chapter 7: I Know What I Mean: First-person Authority in Speech and Thought by Ignacio Cervieri
Part III: Logical and Linguistic Analyses of Some Central Philosophical Problems
Chapter 8: Perceptual Verbs, Conceivability, and Quantifiers: George Berkeley’s Master Argument and Its Hidden Premise by Robert Calabria Díaz
Chapter 9: Language, Concepts, and the Nature of Inference by Matías Osta-Vélez
Chapter 10: On Temporal Representations: A Study from the Lexicon by Sylvia Costa, Federico de León, Ernesto Macazaga García, and Yamila Montenegro
Chapter 11: Linguistics in Philosophy: Following Vendler’s Footsteps by Ana Clara Polakof