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Francois Recanati

Institut Jean Nicod
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  • Institut Jean Nicod
    Department of Philosophy- CNRS
    Regular Faculty
  • All publications (223)
  •  2
    Meaning and Force: The Pragmatics of Performative Utterances
    Philosophy and Rhetoric 23 (3): 248-250. 1987.
  •  111
    Understanding force cancellation
    Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy. 2022.
    The Unity of the PropositionPropositions as Acts
  •  65
    Jules Vuillemin et la philosophie analytique
    Revue de Synthèse 141 (1-2): 11-33. 2020.
    Résumé Dans cette communication, qui reprend en partie les idées exposées il y a trente ans dans un article de Critique, François Recanati entreprend de caractériser la philosophie analytique en discutant une demi-douzaine de traits supposés distinctifs de la discipline : l’usage de la logique, l’importance de la philosophie du langage considérée comme philosophie première, le refus de réduire la philosophie à l’histoire de la philosophie, l’idée que la philosophie est une discipline de second n…Read more
    Résumé Dans cette communication, qui reprend en partie les idées exposées il y a trente ans dans un article de Critique, François Recanati entreprend de caractériser la philosophie analytique en discutant une demi-douzaine de traits supposés distinctifs de la discipline : l’usage de la logique, l’importance de la philosophie du langage considérée comme philosophie première, le refus de réduire la philosophie à l’histoire de la philosophie, l’idée que la philosophie est une discipline de second niveau, l’idée qu’un progrès est possible en philosophie, ou encore – trait fondamental selon l’auteur – le caractère intersubjectif de la pratique analytique, qui rappelle la pratique scientifique et constitue ce que François Recanati appelle « l’esprit scientifique » de la philosophie analytique. A chaque étape du parcours, l’auteur s’interroge sur les aspects de cette philosophie qui pouvaient susciter des réserves de la part de Jules Vuillemin, malgré son admiration globale pour ce courant.
  •  63
    Natural Meaning and the Foundations of Human Communication: A Comparison Between Marty and Grice
    In Hélène Leblanc & Giuliano Bacigalupo (eds.), Anton Marty and Contemporary Philosophy, Springer Verlag. pp. 13-31. 2019.
    Several authors have noted the proximity of Marty’s and Grice’s ideas. Both Marty and Grice distinguish natural meaning and the sort of meaning involved in human communication; and they both attempt to provide a characterization of human communication that does not essentially appeal to the conventional nature of its linguistic devices. In this contribution, I single out what I take to be a main difference between Marty and Grice. Marty views linguistic communication as continuous with natural m…Read more
    Several authors have noted the proximity of Marty’s and Grice’s ideas. Both Marty and Grice distinguish natural meaning and the sort of meaning involved in human communication; and they both attempt to provide a characterization of human communication that does not essentially appeal to the conventional nature of its linguistic devices. In this contribution, I single out what I take to be a main difference between Marty and Grice. Marty views linguistic communication as continuous with natural meaning while Grice insists on their irreducible difference. I argue that Marty is better positioned than Grice to account for intermediate cases like Grice’s Salome example, and that this can be done without losing the benefits of Grice’s reflexive analysis of communicative intentions.
  • About the Lekton: Response to Kölbel
    In Raphael Salkie & Ilse Depraetere (eds.), Semantics and Pragmatics: Drawing a Line, Springer Verlag. 2016.
  •  94
    Transparent Coreference
    Topoi 40 (1): 107-115. 2019.
    Because reference is not transparent, coreference is not transparent either: it is possible for the subject to refer to the same individual twice without knowing that the two acts of reference target the same individual. That happens whenever the subject associates two distinct yet coreferential files with two token singular terms. The subject may not know that the two files corefer, so her ascribing contradictory properties to the same object does not threaten her rationality. But if the subjec…Read more
    Because reference is not transparent, coreference is not transparent either: it is possible for the subject to refer to the same individual twice without knowing that the two acts of reference target the same individual. That happens whenever the subject associates two distinct yet coreferential files with two token singular terms. The subject may not know that the two files corefer, so her ascribing contradictory properties to the same object does not threaten her rationality. But if the subject deploys the same file twice, in association with both of the singular terms, she is bound to know that she is referring to the same entity twice.
    Value TheoryMental Files
  •  65
    Réflexion et Réflexivité
    Journal of Ancient Philosophy 296-303. forthcoming.
  •  181
    Immunity to error through misidentification (edited book)
    with Simon Prosser
    Cambridge University Press. 2012.
    In this collection of newly commissioned essays, the contributors present a variety of approaches to it, engaging with historical and empirical aspects of the subject as well as contemporary philosophical work.
    Immunity to Error through MisidentificationThe First-Person PronounFirst-Person ContentsSelf-Conscio…Read more
    Immunity to Error through MisidentificationThe First-Person PronounFirst-Person ContentsSelf-Consciousness in ExperienceBodily Awareness
  •  346
    Fictional, Metafictional, Parafictional
    Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 118 (1): 25-54. 2018.
    Fictional CharactersEmpty NamesMental Files
  •  140
    Contextualism and Polysemy
    Dialectica 71 (3): 379-397. 2017.
    In this paper, I argue that that polysemy is a two-sided phenomenon. It can be reduced neither to pragmatic modulation nor to ambiguity, for it is a mixture of both. The senses of a polysemous expression result from pragmatic modulation but they are stored in memory, as the senses of an ambiguous expression are. The difference with straightforward ambiguity is that the modulation relations between the senses are transparent to the language users: the senses are felt as related – they form a fami…Read more
    In this paper, I argue that that polysemy is a two-sided phenomenon. It can be reduced neither to pragmatic modulation nor to ambiguity, for it is a mixture of both. The senses of a polysemous expression result from pragmatic modulation but they are stored in memory, as the senses of an ambiguous expression are. The difference with straightforward ambiguity is that the modulation relations between the senses are transparent to the language users: the senses are felt as related – they form a family of senses. In other words, whereas two homonymous expressions are different expressions, with the same phonological realization but distinct meanings, a polyseme is a single expression, i.e. a semantic as well as a phonological unit. It has one meaning, which should not be confused with the separate senses which it contributes in context. Different ways of thinking of that unitary meaning will be discussed, and consequences drawn for the debate between more or less radical versions of Contextualism.
    Ambiguity and PolysemySemantic ContextualismSemantics-Pragmatics Distinction
  •  1292
    IV*—Contextual Dependence and Definite Descriptions
    Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 87 (1): 57-74. 1987.
    François Recanati; IV*—Contextual Dependence and Definite Descriptions, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, Volume 87, Issue 1, 1 June 1987, Pages 57–74, h.
    Descriptions
  • La Transparence et l'énonciation. Pour introduire a la pragmatique
    Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 85 (4): 529-533. 1980.
  •  126
    Direct Reference
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 56 (4): 953-956. 1996.
  •  13737
    The Pragmatics of What is Said
    Mind and Language 4 (4): 295-329. 1989.
    Pragmatics, MiscSemantic ContextualismSemantics-Pragmatics Distinction
  •  217
    Millikan’s Theory of Signs (review)
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 75 (3). 2007.
    Review of Millikan's book Varieties of Meaning (MIT Press/Bradford Books, 2004).
    Naturalizing Mental ContentSituation Semantics
  •  20
    Descriptions and Situations
    In Marga Reimer & Anne Bezuidenhout (eds.), Descriptions and beyond, Oxford University Press. pp. 15-40. 2004.
    forthcoming.
    Situation SemanticsAttributive and Referential Uses of DescriptionsIncompleteness of DescriptionsInd…Read more
    Situation SemanticsAttributive and Referential Uses of DescriptionsIncompleteness of DescriptionsIndeterminacy, MiscVariables
  •  100
    Varieties of Simulation
    In Jérôme Dokic & Joëlle Proust (eds.), Simulation and Knowledge of Action, John Benjamins. pp. 151-171. 2002.
    The Simulation TheoryImagination and PretenseAttitude Ascriptions, Misc
  •  6
    La conjecture de Ducrot, vingt ans après
    In Marion Carel (ed.), Les Facettes du dire : hommage à Oswald Ducrot, Kime. pp. 269-281. 2002.
    Réponse aux objections soulevées par Oswald Ducrot à l'encontre de mon approche "gricéenne" de la performativité.
    PerformativesSpeech Acts
  • Performatifs et délocutifs: à propos du verbe 's'excuser'
    Semantikos 2 69-87. 1978.
  •  51
    Reply to Gauker
    Teorema: International Journal of Philosophy 32 (2): 81-84. 2013.
    Response to Gauker's paper in the Symposium on *Truth-Conditional Pragmatics* (OUP 2010).
    The Role of Language in ThoughtLinguistic CommunicationSemantics-Pragmatics DistinctionContext and C…Read more
    The Role of Language in ThoughtLinguistic CommunicationSemantics-Pragmatics DistinctionContext and Context-Dependence, Misc
  •  1
    Il problema della delimitazione fra semantica e pragmatica
    Quaderni di Semantica 1 197-234. 1980.
  •  147
    Predelli and García-Carpintero on Literal Meaning
    Critica 38 (112): 69-79. 2006.
    Este texto da respuesta a los que, en este mismo número, Predelli y García-Carpintero dedican a mi libro Literal Meaning. En la primera sección hago un breve resumen de esta obra; en la segunda respondo a los comentarios críticos de Predelli y en la tercera a los de García-Carpintero.
    Context and Context-Dependence, MiscSemantics-Pragmatics DistinctionNonliteral Meaning
  •  49
    Commentary on Daniel Morgan, 'A Demonstrative Model of First-Person Thought'
    This response was written for the Vth Online Consciousness Conference.
  •  14
    Reply to Carston
    Response to Carston's paper, 'How Many Pragmatic Systems Are There'?
    Relevance Theory
  •  74
    Introduction to "Analytic Philosophy in Europe"
    Philosophical Studies 82 (2): 111-112. 1996.
  •  581
    What is said
    Synthese 128 (1): 75--91. 2001.
    A critique of the purely semantic, minimalist notion of 'what is said'.
    Semantic MinimalismThe Scope of Context-DependenceSpeaker Meaning and Linguistic MeaningThe Nature o…Read more
    Semantic MinimalismThe Scope of Context-DependenceSpeaker Meaning and Linguistic MeaningThe Nature of Contents, MiscSemantics-Pragmatics Distinction
  •  62
    Mental Files and Identity
    In Anne Reboul (ed.), Philosophical papers dedicated to Kevin Mulligan, . 2011.
    Mental files serve as individual or singular concepts. Like singular terms in the language, they refer, or are supposed to refer. What they refer to is not determined by properties which the subject takes the referent to have (i.e. by the information stored in the file), but through relations to various entities in the environment in which the file fulfills its function. Files are based on acquaintance relations, and the function of the file is to store whatever information is made available thr…Read more
    Mental files serve as individual or singular concepts. Like singular terms in the language, they refer, or are supposed to refer. What they refer to is not determined by properties which the subject takes the referent to have (i.e. by the information stored in the file), but through relations to various entities in the environment in which the file fulfills its function. Files are based on acquaintance relations, and the function of the file is to store whatever information is made available through the relations in question. I offer a typology of files. The most important distinction is between proto-files and conceptual files. In contrast to proto-files, conceptual files can host not only information derived through the specific relation on which the file is based, but also information about the same object gained in some other way. In this framework identity comes into the picture twice. (i) Identity is presupposed when two pieces of information occur in the same file. Such 'presumptions of identity' ground the linguistic phenomenon of de jure coreference, which takes place when two singular terms, or two occurrences of a singular term, are associated with the same file. (ii) Judgments of identity work by linking two distinct files, thereby enabling information to flow freely between them. This corresponds to de facto coreference. (Linking is not merging ; identity judgments have the effect of merging files only when the files belong to a very specific category, that of 'encyclopedia entries' -- a type of conceptual file based on a higher-order relation rather than on a specific acquaintance relation.) In the last part of the paper I will discuss, and attempt to rebut, two objections to the mental-file account. According to the first objection, the account is circular ; according to the second objection, de jure coreference cannot be accounted for it in terms of identity of the associated mental files because de jure coreference is not a transitive relation.
    Identity, MiscMental Files
  • Contextualism and Compositionality
    In Luisa Mora-Millan (ed.), Cognicion & Lenguaje, . pp. 201-217. 2008.
    Compositionality
  •  1751
    Rigidity and direct reference
    Philosophical Studies 53 (1). 1988.
    Russellian and Direct Reference Theories of MeaningSpecific ExpressionsNouns
  •  275
    Embedded implicatures
    Philosophical Perspectives 17 (1). 2003.
    Conversational implicatures do not normally fall within the scope of operators because they arise at the speech act level, not at the level of sub-locutionary constituents. Yet in some cases they do, or so it seems. My aim in this paper is to compare different approaches to the problem raised by what I call 'embedded implicatures': seeming implicatures that arise locally, at a sub-locutionary level, without resulting from an inference in the narrow sense.
    Conversational ImplicatureImplicature, MiscSemantics-Pragmatics DistinctionSemantics, Misc
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