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Stephen Schiffer

New York University
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    162
    • Most Recent
    • Most Downloaded
    • Topics
  •  Events
    3
  •  News and Updates
    62

 More details
  • New York University
    Department of Philosophy
    Distinguished Professor
University of Oxford
Faculty of Philosophy
DPhil, 1970
Areas of Specialization
Metaphysics and Epistemology
Philosophy of Language
Philosophy of Mind
Areas of Interest
Epistemology
Philosophy of Cognitive Science
Logic and Philosophy of Logic
Meta-Ethics
Philosophy of Mind
Philosophy of Language
Philosophy of Action
Metaphysics
Metaphilosophy
General Philosophy of Science
5 more
  • All publications (162)
  •  1
    Propositional attitudes in direct-reference semantics
    In Katarzyna Jaszczolt (ed.), The Pragmatics of Propositional Attitude Reports, Elsevier. pp. 14--30. 2000.
    Propositional Attitudes
  •  92
    The Mode-of-Presentation Problem
    In C. A. Anderson J. Owens (ed.), Propositional Attitudes: The Role of Content in Logic, Language, and Mind, Csli. pp. 249-268. 1990.
    Fregean Theories of Attitude AscriptionsFregean Sense
  •  210
    A normative theory of meaning (review)
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 65 (1). 2002.
    One has some idea of what to expect from the theory of meaning offered in The Grammar of Meaning even before opening the book, since Bob Brandom, who should know, says on the book’s jacket that, according to the authors
    Value Theory, MiscellaneousNormativity of Meaning and Content
  •  701
    Meaning
    Clarendon Press. 1972.
    What is it for marks or sounds to have meaning, and what is it for someone to mean something in producing them? Answering these and related questions, Schiffer explores communication, speech acts, convention, and the meaning of linguistic items in this reissue of a seminal work on the foundations of meaning. A new introduction takes account of recent developments and places his theory in a broader context.
    Intention-Based Theories of MeaningLinguistic ConventionPublic Language
  •  493
    The epistemic theory of vagueness
    Philosophical Perspectives 13 481-503. 1999.
    Epistemic Theories of Vagueness
  •  1
    Extensionalist Semantics and Sententialist Theories of Belief
    In Ernest LePore (ed.), New directions in semantics, Academic Press. 1987.
    MeaningSemantic Theories
  •  113
    Reply to Ray
    Noûs 29 (3): 397-401. 1995.
  •  126
    Vagueness and Partial Belief
    Noûs 34 (s1). 2000.
    Theories of Vagueness, Misc
  •  86
    Correspondence & Disquotation (review)
    International Studies in Philosophy 28 (4): 112-113. 1996.
    British Philosophy
  •  75
    Replies
    Philosophical Issues 10 (1): 321-343. 2000.
    Philosophy of Linguistics
  •  113
    Williamson on Our Ignorance in Borderline Cases
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 57 (4). 1997.
    Vagueness and Indeterminacy
  •  482
    Philosophical & Jurisprudential Issues of Vagueness
    In Ralf Geert Keil & Poscher (ed.), Vagueness and the Law: Philosophical and Legal Approaches, Not Yet Known. forthcoming.
    Theories of Vagueness
  •  124
    The two-stage theory of meaning
    A central claim of Paul Horwich’s 1998 book Meaning was that meaning properties reduce to acceptance properties, where  a meaning property is a property of the form e means m for x, e being “a word or phrase—whether it be spoken, written, signed, or merely thought (i.e. an item of ‘mentalese’)” (44);  an acceptance property for an expression e relative to a person x is a relation of the form x is disposed to accept an e-containing sentence of kind … in circumstances of kind …
    Meaning, Misc
  •  249
    Actual-language relations
    Philosophical Perspectives 7 231-258. 1993.
    Languages, MiscLinguistic ConventionKnowledge of LanguagePublic Language
  •  340
    Meaning In Speech and In Thought
    Philosophical Quarterly 63 (250): 141-159. 2013.
    If we think in a lingua mentis, questions about relations between linguistic meaning and propositional-attitude content become questions about relations between meaning in a public language (p-meaning) and meaning in a language of thought (t-meaning). Whether or not the neo-Gricean is correct that p-meaning can be defined in terms of t-meaning and then t-meaning defined in terms of the causal-functional roles of mentalese expressions, it's apt to seem obvious that separate accounts are needed of…Read more
    If we think in a lingua mentis, questions about relations between linguistic meaning and propositional-attitude content become questions about relations between meaning in a public language (p-meaning) and meaning in a language of thought (t-meaning). Whether or not the neo-Gricean is correct that p-meaning can be defined in terms of t-meaning and then t-meaning defined in terms of the causal-functional roles of mentalese expressions, it's apt to seem obvious that separate accounts are needed of p-meaning and t-meaning, since p-meaning, unlike t-meaning, must be understood at least partly in terms of communication. Paul Horwich, however, claims that his ‘use theory of meaning’ provides a uniform account of all meaning in terms of ‘acceptance properties’ that, surprisingly, implicate nothing about use in communication. But it turns out that the details of his theory belie his claim about it
    Attitude Ascriptions
  •  183
    Two Issues of Vagueness
    The Monist 81 (2): 193--214. 1998.
    Two issues of vagueness, which may together exhaust its philosophical interest, are, first, to solve the sorites paradox and, second, to explain the notion of a borderline case. I’ll try to make a little headway on both issues.
    Theories of Vagueness, Misc
  •  214
    An introduction to content and its role in explanation
    Explanatory Role of Content
  •  133
    Kripkenstein meets the remnants of meaning
    Philosophical Studies 49 (2): 147-162. 1986.
    Kripkenstein on MeaningSemantics
  •  108
    Stalnaker's problem of intentionality: On Robert Stalnaker's inquiry
    Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 67 (April): 87-97. 1986.
    Intentionality, Misc
  •  356
    Descriptions, indexicals, and belief reports: Some dilemmas (but not the ones you expect)
    Mind 104 (413): 107-131. 1995.
    Hidden-Indexical Theories of Attitude Ascriptions
  •  1
    Remnants of Meaning
    Studia Logica 49 (3): 427-428. 1990.
    Logic and Philosophy of Logic
  •  61
    Overview of the Book
    Mind and Language 3 (1): 1-8. 1988.
  •  318
    Propositions, What Are They Good For?
    In R. Schantz (ed.), Current Issues in Theoretical Philosophy: Prospects for Meaning, Walter De Gruyter. 2007.
    Although there is a vast literature on whether propositional attitudes are relations to propositions, a crucial question that ought to lie at the heart of this debate is not often enough seriously addressed. This is the question of the contribution propositions make to the ways in which we benefit from having our propositional-attitude concepts, if those concepts are concepts of relations to propositions. Unless propositions can be shown to confer a benefit that no non-propositions could provide…Read more
    Although there is a vast literature on whether propositional attitudes are relations to propositions, a crucial question that ought to lie at the heart of this debate is not often enough seriously addressed. This is the question of the contribution propositions make to the ways in which we benefit from having our propositional-attitude concepts, if those concepts are concepts of relations to propositions. Unless propositions can be shown to confer a benefit that no non-propositions could provide, we should probably doubt whether propositional attitudes really are relations to propositions. I believe that propositional attitudes are relations to propositions and that the role played by them in our conceptual economy cannot be played by things of any other kind, and in this paper I try to say why. This paper, in other words, offers my answer to the question posed by my title.
    IntentionalityThe Role of PropositionsPropositions and That-Clauses
  •  303
    Vague properties
    In Richard Dietz & Sebastiano Moruzzi (eds.), Cuts and clouds: vagueness, its nature, and its logic, Oxford University Press. pp. 109--130. 2010.
    I. Vague Properties and the Problem of Vagueness The philosophical problem of vagueness is to say what vagueness is in a way that helps to resolve the sorites paradox. Saying what vagueness is requires saying what kinds of things can be vague and in what the vagueness of each kind consists. Philosophers dispute whether things of this, that, or the other kind can be vague, but no one disputes that there are vague linguistic expressions. Among vague expressions, predicates hold a special place in …Read more
    I. Vague Properties and the Problem of Vagueness The philosophical problem of vagueness is to say what vagueness is in a way that helps to resolve the sorites paradox. Saying what vagueness is requires saying what kinds of things can be vague and in what the vagueness of each kind consists. Philosophers dispute whether things of this, that, or the other kind can be vague, but no one disputes that there are vague linguistic expressions. Among vague expressions, predicates hold a special place in the problem of vagueness, for it’s their vagueness that is soritesgenerating. That puts the vagueness of predicates at the hub of the problem of vagueness, and there can be little doubt that we’ll be a short step from home if we can account for it. Any account of vagueness will of course require commitment to theses that are themselves foci of philosophical debate, but one can’t expect to get anywhere without taking on some as working hypotheses and then striving to say something that will be plausible if those hypotheses are plausible. One of the working hypotheses of this paper is that propositional attitudes and propositional speech acts are relations to propositions of some stripe or other, in the generic sense in which a proposition is an abstract, mind- and language-independent entity that has a truth condition, and has that truth condition both essentially and absolutely (i.e. without relativization to anything).1 The existence of propositions requires the existence of properties, in the generic sense in which a property is an abstract, mind- and language-independent entity that has an instantiation condition, and has that instantiation condition both essentially and absolutely. For present purposes it will be harmless to pretend that the propositions we believe and assert are Russellian propositions---structured entities whose basic constituents are the objects and properties our beliefs and speech acts are about. When a propositionalist speaks in loosey-goosey mode, she is apt to say that a sentence token is true just in case the proposition expressed in its utterance is true.
    Properties, Misc
  •  71
    Book review (review)
    Linguistics and Philosophy 19 (1): 91-102. 1996.
    Philosophy of Linguistics
  •  77
    Paradox and the A Priori
    In Tamar Szabo Gendler & John Hawthorne (eds.), Oxford Studies in Epistemology: Volume 1, Oxford University Press Uk. pp. 1--273. 2005.
    The A Priori
  •  183
    Two perspectives on knowledge of language
    Philosophical Issues 16 (1). 2006.
    Knowledge of Language
  •  467
    A problem for a direct-reference theory of belief reports
    Noûs 40 (2): 361-368. 2006.
    (1) The propositions we believe and say are _Russellian_ _propositions_: structured propositions whose basic components are the objects and properties our thoughts and speech acts are about. (2) Many singular terms
    Russellian Theories of Attitude AscriptionsKripke's Puzzle About Belief
  •  86
    Meanings and concepts
    Lingua E Stile 33 (3): 399-411. 1998.
    Concepts, Misc
  • 13.1 the face-value theory of belief reports
    In Ernie Lepore & Barry C. Smith (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Language, Oxford University Press. pp. 267. 2005.
    Attitude Ascriptions
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