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1Is Grammar Psychological?In L. S. Cauman, Isaac Levi, Charles D. Parsons & Robert Schwartz (eds.), How Many Questions?, Hacket. pp. 170--179. 1983.
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110Cresswell M. J.. Entities and indices. Studies in linguistics and philosophy, vol. 41. Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht, Boston, and London, 1990, xi + 274 pp (review)Journal of Symbolic Logic 58 (2): 723-725. 1993.
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482Sense and Syntax: An Inaugural Lecture Delivered Before the University of Oxford on 20 October 1994Oxford University Press. 1995.
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1Linguistic theory and Davidson's program in semanticsIn Ernest LePore (ed.), Truth and Interpretation: Perspectives on the Philosophy of Donald Davidson, Blackwell. pp. 29--48. 1986.
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235Expression, truth, predication, and context: Two perspectivesInternational Journal of Philosophical Studies 16 (4). 2008.In this article I contrast in two ways those conceptions of semantic theory deriving from Richard Montague's Intensional Logic (IL) and later developments with conceptions that stick pretty closely to a far weaker semantic apparatus for human first languages. IL is a higher-order language incorporating the simple theory of types. As such, it endows predicates with a reference. Its intensional features yield a conception of propositional identity (namely necessary equivalence) that has seemed to …Read more
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60Review: Esa Saarinen, Game-theoretical Sematics (review)Journal of Symbolic Logic 51 (1): 240-244. 1986.
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2On events in linguistic semanticsIn James Higginbotham, Fabio Pianesi & Achille C. Varzi (eds.), Speaking of events, Oxford University Press. 2000.
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Idiolects: TheirIn Ernie Lepore & Barry C. Smith (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Language, Oxford University Press. pp. 140. 2005.
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112Tensed ThoughtsMind and Language 10 (3): 226-249. 1995.: Consider mental states of the type that relate a subject to a content expressed by a sentence. I propose that some of these states necessarily include as constituents of their contents the states themselves. These reflexive states arise when one locates a content as belonging, for example, to one's own present or past. That content is then a tense% thought, ordering one's present state with respect to the content. Anaphoric cross‐reference between an event or state and a constituent of its own…Read more
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5The Semantics of QuestionsIn The Handbook of Contemporary Semantic Theory, Oxford: Oxford University Press. 1996.
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244Speaking of events (edited book)Oxford University Press. 2000.The idea that an adequate semantics of ordinary language calls for some theory of events has sparked considerable debate among linguists and philosophers. On the one hand, so many linguistic phenomena appear to be explained if (and, according to some authors, only if) we make room for logical forms in which reference to or quantification over events is explicitly featured. Examples include nominalization, adverbial modification, tense and aspect, plurals, and singular causal statements. On the o…Read more
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1On second-order logic and natural languageIn Gila Sher & Richard Tieszen (eds.), Between logic and intuition: essays in honor of Charles Parsons, Cambridge University Press. pp. 79--99. 2000.
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2912. mass and count quantifiersIn Emmon W. Bach, Eloise Jelinek, Angelika Kratzer & Barbara H. Partee (eds.), Quantification in Natural Languages, Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 2--383. 1995.
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166Remembering, imagining, and the first personIn Alex Barber (ed.), Epistemology of language, Oxford University Press. pp. 496--533. 2003.
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253On linguistics in philosophy, and philosophy in linguisticsLinguistics and Philosophy 25 (5): 573-584. 2002.After reviewing some major features of theinteractions between Linguistics and Philosophyin recent years, I suggest that the depth and breadthof current inquiry into semanticshas brought this subject into contact both with questionsof the nature of linguistic competence and with modern andtraditional philosophical study of the nature ofour thoughts, and the problems of metaphysics.I see this development as promising for thefuture of both subjects.
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131Jackendoff's conceptualismBehavioral and Brain Sciences 26 (6): 680-681. 2003.In this commentary, I concentrate upon Ray Jackendoff's view of the proper foundations for semantics within the context of generative grammar. Jackendoff (2002) favors a form of internalism that he calls “conceptualism.” I argue that a retreat from realism to conceptualism is not only unwarranted, but even self-defeating, in that the issues that prompt his view will inevitably reappear if the latter is adopted.
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