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In Meanings and Other Things fourteen leading philosophers explore central themes in the writings of Stephen Schiffer, a leading figure in philosophy since the 1970s. Topics range from theories of meaning to moral cognitivism, the nature of paradox, and the problem of vagueness. Schiffer's responses set out his current thinking.
Informationen zum Autor Gary Ostertag received his PhD at the Graduate Center, CUNY, writing under Stephen Schiffer. From 2009-2014 he was director of The Saul Kripke Center, where he oversaw the publication of Philosophical Troubles and Reference and Existence. His publications include the edited volume, Definite Descriptions: A Reader (MIT, 1998), and articles, reviews and book chapters in the philosophy of language, the history of analytic philosophy, and musical ontology. Prior to teaching at CUNY and Nassau he was Senior Programmer at Information Builders, Inc., in New York. Klappentext In Meanings and Other Things fourteen leading philosophers explore central themes in the writings of Stephen Schiffer, a leading figure in philosophy since the 1970s. Topics range from theories of meaning to moral cognitivism, the nature of paradox, and the problem of vagueness. Schiffer's responses set out his current thinking. Zusammenfassung Stephen Schiffer's writing has been central to analytic philosophy of language and mind since the 1970s. In 1972 his book Meaning launched an important research program into Gricean, or intention-based, approaches to linguistic meaning, which would come to dominate much subsequent theorizing about language. A sea change occurred in 1987 with the publication of Remnants of Meaning. Schiffer here repudiated the project initiated by Meaning, arguing that the theory of public-language meaning it described and the account of mental representation it required were based on false presuppositions. The ramifications here were far reaching and set the agenda for discussions in the philosophy of language and mind for a generation. In 2003, The Things We Mean initiated a more positive program, but one informed by the negative results of Remnants. Things also reflected the broadening of Schiffer's concerns, which now extended to metaphysics, metaethics, and the skeptical paradoxes. In Meanings and Other Things fourteen leading philosophers explore central themes in Schiffer's writings. Topics range from theories of meaning to moral cognitivism, the nature of paradox, and the problem of vagueness. The volume also contains a comprehensive introduction that describes the evolution of Schiffer's thought, and closes with Schiffer's replies to his critics, extended essays that bring us up to date on Schiffer's current thinking on the themes that have defined not only his career, but philosophy of language as it is now practised. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction Part I 1: Amie Thomasson: Easy Ontology and its Consequences 2: Thomas Hofweber: From Remnants to Things, and Back Again 3: Ian Rumfitt: Objects of Thought 4: Michael Smith: Schiffer s Unhappy-Face Solution Part II 5: Gary Ostertag: Propositional Platitudes 6: Ray Buchanan: Schiffer s Puzzle: A Kind of Fregean Response 7: Nathan Salmon: Constraint with Restraint Part III 8: Dorothy Edgington: Schiffer on Indeterminacy, Vagueness, and Conditionals 9: Hartry Field: Vagueness, Partial Belief, and Logic 10: Crispin Wright: On the Characterization of Borderline Cases 11: Paul Horwich: The Nature of Paradox Part IV 12: Stephen Neale: Silent Reference 13: Anita Avramides: Abiding Intentions 14: Kent Bach: Schiffer on Russell s Theory and Referential Uses Part V: Replies to the Essays 15: Stephen Schiffer: Pleonastic Entities: Responses to Amie Thomasson, Thomas Hofweber, Ian Rumfitt, and Michael Smith 16: Stephen Schiffer: De Re Belief Reports: Response to Gary Ostertag 17: Stephen Schiffer: The Relativity Feature: Response to Ray Buchanan 18: Stephen Schiffer: De Re Subtleties: Response to Nathan Salmon 19: Stephen Schiffer: Vagueness and Indeterminacy: Responses to Dorothy Edgington, Hartry Field and Crispin Wright 20: Stephen Schiffer: A Source of Paradox: Response to Paul Horwich 21: Stephen Schiffer: Gricean Semanti...
Auteur
Gary Ostertag received his PhD at the Graduate Center, CUNY, writing under Stephen Schiffer. From 2009-2014 he was director of The Saul Kripke Center, where he oversaw the publication of Philosophical Troubles and Reference and Existence. His publications include the edited volume, Definite Descriptions: A Reader (MIT, 1998), and articles, reviews and book chapters in the philosophy of language, the history of analytic philosophy, and musical ontology. Prior to teaching at CUNY and Nassau he was Senior Programmer at Information Builders, Inc., in New York.
Texte du rabat
In Meanings and Other Things fourteen leading philosophers explore central themes in the writings of Stephen Schiffer, a leading figure in philosophy since the 1970s. Topics range from theories of meaning to moral cognitivism, the nature of paradox, and the problem of vagueness. Schiffer's responses set out his current thinking.
Résumé
Stephen Schiffer's writing has been central to analytic philosophy of language and mind since the 1970s. In 1972 his book Meaning launched an important research program into Gricean, or intention-based, approaches to linguistic meaning, which would come to dominate much subsequent theorizing about language. A sea change occurred in 1987 with the publication of Remnants of Meaning. Schiffer here repudiated the project initiated by Meaning, arguing that the theory of public-language meaning it described and the account of mental representation it required were based on false presuppositions. The ramifications here were far reaching and set the agenda for discussions in the philosophy of language and mind for a generation. In 2003, The Things We Mean initiated a more positive program, but one informed by the negative results of Remnants. Things also reflected the broadening of Schiffer's concerns, which now extended to metaphysics, metaethics, and the skeptical paradoxes. In Meanings and Other Things fourteen leading philosophers explore central themes in Schiffer's writings. Topics range from theories of meaning to moral cognitivism, the nature of paradox, and the problem of vagueness. The volume also contains a comprehensive introduction that describes the evolution of Schiffer's thought, and closes with Schiffer's replies to his critics, extended essays that bring us up to date on Schiffer's current thinking on the themes that have defined not only his career, but philosophy of language as it is now practised.
Contenu
Introduction
Part I
1: Amie Thomasson: Easy Ontology and its Consequences
2: Thomas Hofweber: From Remnants to Things, and Back Again
3: Ian Rumfitt: Objects of Thought
4: Michael Smith: Schiffer s Unhappy-Face Solution
Part II
5: Gary Ostertag: Propositional Platitudes
6: Ray Buchanan: Schiffer s Puzzle: A Kind of Fregean Response
7: Nathan Salmon: Constraint with Restraint
Part III
8: Dorothy Edgington: Schiffer on Indeterminacy, Vagueness, and Conditionals
9: Hartry Field: Vagueness, Partial Belief, and Logic
10: Crispin Wright: On the Characterization of Borderline Cases
11: Paul Horwich: The Nature of Paradox
Part IV
12: Stephen Neale: Silent Reference
13: Anita Avramides: Abiding Intentions
14: Kent Bach: Schiffer on Russell s Theory and Referential Uses
Part V: Replies to the Essays
15: Stephen Schiffer: Pleonastic Entities: Responses to Amie Thomasson, Thomas Hofweber, Ian Rumfitt, and Michael Smith
16: Stephen Schiffer: De Re Belief Reports: Response to Gary Ostertag
17: Stephen Schiffer: The Relativity Feature: Response to Ray Buchanan …