Providing an account of major philosophical issues, this essential textbook bridges the gap between linguistics and the philosophy of language.
Introduction to Linguistic Philosophy presents the theories of leading linguistic analysts such as Wittgenstein, Frege, Russell, Carnap and Quine. Ian Mackenzie's exploration into these theories prepares readers for advanced work on most topics in semantics and the study of language. His approach to the philosophy of language stresses the importance of observing how language is used rather than assuming that it conforms to a pre-existing logical structure. In addition to dealing with foundational issues, such as truth, meaning and the nature of language, this book exploresProviding an account of major philosophical issues, this essential textbook bridges the gap between linguistics and the philosophy of language.
Introduction to Linguistic Philosophy presents the theories of leading linguistic analysts such as Wittgenstein, Frege, Russell, Carnap and Quine. Ian Mackenzie's exploration into these theories prepares readers for advanced work on most topics in semantics and the study of language. His approach to the philosophy of language stresses the importance of observing how language is used rather than assuming that it conforms to a pre-existing logical structure. In addition to dealing with foundational issues, such as truth, meaning and the nature of language, this book exploresPART ONE: FOUNDATIONAL ISSUES
Meaning and the Nature of Language
The Semantic Conception of Truth
Logical Truth and Analyticity
PART TWO: NAMING
Names, Sense and Nominatum
The Causal Theory of Names
PART THREE: DEFINITE DESCRIPTIONS
Description and Analysis
Descriptions as Names
PART FOUR: NON-EXTENSIONAL CONTEXTS
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