CLCH0
LanguageENG
PublishYear2006
publishCompany
Cambridge University Press
EISBN
9780511258008
PISBN
9780521842150
- Product Details
- Contents
In this textbook, Michael Morris offers a critical introduction to the central issues of the philosophy of language. Each chapter focusses on one or two texts which have had a seminal influence on work in the subject, and uses these as a way of approaching both the central topics and the various traditions of dealing with them. Texts include classic writings by Frege, Russell, Kripke, Quine, Davidson, Austin, Grice and Wittgenstein. Theoretical jargon is kept to a minimum and is fully explained whenever it is introduced. The range of topics covered includes sense and reference, definite descriptions, proper names, natural-kind terms, de re and de dicto necessity, propositional attitudes, truth-theoretical approaches to meaning, radical interpretation, indeterminacy of translation, speech acts, intentional theories of meaning, and scepticism about meaning. The book will be invaluable to students and to all readers who are interested in the nature of linguistic meaning.
Collected by
- Princeton University
- Yale University
- University College London
- University of Cambridge
- University of Oxford
- Harvard University
- Columbia University Library
- Stanford University
- University of Chicago
- MIT
- UCB
