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Naming and Indexicality

This book provides an accessible, comprehensive and critical overview of theories of linguistic reference and meaning in the 20th century.

Gregory Bochner (Author)

9781108428453, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 9 December 2021

250 pages
22.3 x 14.6 x 2.3 cm, 0.501 kg

How do words stand for things? Taking ideas from philosophical semantics and pragmatics, this book offers a unique, detailed, and critical survey of central debates concerning linguistic reference in the twentieth century. It then uses the survey to identify and argue for a novel version of current 'two-dimensional' theories of meaning, which generalise the context-dependency of indexical expressions. The survey highlights the history of tensions between semantic and epistemic constraints on plausible theories of word meaning, from analytic philosophy and modern truth-conditional semantics, to the Referentialist and Externalist revolutions in theories of meaning, to the more recent reconciliatory ambition of two-dimensionalists. It clearly introduces technical semantical notions, theses, and arguments, with easy-to-follow, step-by-step guides. Wide-ranging in its scope, yet offering an accessible route into literature that can seem complex and technical, this will be essential reading for advanced students, and academic researchers in semantics, pragmatics, and philosophy of language.

Introduction
1. Descriptivism
2. The Referentialist Revolution
3. Three Puzzles Arising from the Rigidity Thesis
4. Varieties of Descriptivist Responses
5. Two-Dimensionalism
Conclusion.

Subject Areas: Philosophy of mind [HPM], Semantics, discourse analysis, etc [CFG], Philosophy of language [CFA]

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