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Francois Recanati

Institut Jean Nicod
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  • Institut Jean Nicod
    Department of Philosophy- CNRS
    Regular Faculty
  • All publications (191)
  • Justement: l'inversion argumentative
    Lexique 1 151-164. 1982.
    Informal Logic
  • La logique des noms propres
    with Pierre Jacob
    Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 172 (3): 542-545. 1982.
    Continental Philosophy
  • Contenu sémantique et contenu cognitif des énoncés
    In Daniel Laurier & Francois Lepage (eds.), Essais sur le langage et l'intentionnalité, . pp. 201-226. 1992.
  • Remarques sur les verbes parenthétiques
    In Pierre Attal & C. Muller (eds.), De la Syntaxe à la Pragmatiqu, . pp. 319-352. 1984.
  •  21
    Imagining de se
    My contribution to the 'MIMESIS, METAPHYSICS AND MAKE-BELIEVE' conference held in honour of Kendall Walton in the University of Leeds
    ImaginationFirst-Person Contents
  •  6
    Modes of presentation: perceptual vs deferential
    In Albert Newen, Ulrich Nortmann & Rainer Stuehlmann-Laeisz (eds.), Building on Frege: New Essays on Sense, Content, and Concept, Csli Stanford. pp. 197-208. 2001.
    Through perception we gain information about the world. We also gain information about the world through communication with others. There are concepts — indexical concepts, such as the concept of the present time ('now') or of the present place ('here') or the concept of oneself — which have a special link to perception. Are there concepts which are tied to communication in the same way in which indexical concepts are tied to perception? After discussing, and criticizing, a deflationary approach…Read more
    Through perception we gain information about the world. We also gain information about the world through communication with others. There are concepts — indexical concepts, such as the concept of the present time ('now') or of the present place ('here') or the concept of oneself — which have a special link to perception. Are there concepts which are tied to communication in the same way in which indexical concepts are tied to perception? After discussing, and criticizing, a deflationary approach to the phenomenon of deference, I argue that 'deferential concepts' are indeed the communicational equivalent of indexical concepts.
    Theories of Concepts, MiscConcepts, MiscPerception-Based Theories of ConceptsSocial ExternalismQuota…Read more
    Theories of Concepts, MiscConcepts, MiscPerception-Based Theories of ConceptsSocial ExternalismQuotationThe Role of Language in Thought
  • Contextual Domains
    In Xabier Arrazola (ed.), Discourse, Interaction, and Communication, Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 25-36. 1997.
    Situation SemanticsQuantifier Restriction
  •  952
    Referential/attributive: A contextualist proposal
    Philosophical Studies 56 (3). 1989.
    Attributive and Referential Uses of Descriptions
  •  137
    Force cancellation
    Synthese 196 (4): 1403-1424. 2019.
    Peter Hanks and Scott Soames both defend pragmatic solutions to the problem of the unity of the proposition. According to them, what ties together Tim and baldness in the singular proposition expressed by ‘Tim is bald’ is an act of the speaker : the act of predicating baldness of Tim. But Soames construes that act as force neutral and noncommittal while, for Hanks, it is inherently assertive and committal. Hanks answers the Frege–Geach challenge by arguing that, in complex sentences, the force i…Read more
    Peter Hanks and Scott Soames both defend pragmatic solutions to the problem of the unity of the proposition. According to them, what ties together Tim and baldness in the singular proposition expressed by ‘Tim is bald’ is an act of the speaker : the act of predicating baldness of Tim. But Soames construes that act as force neutral and noncommittal while, for Hanks, it is inherently assertive and committal. Hanks answers the Frege–Geach challenge by arguing that, in complex sentences, the force inherent in the content of an embedded sentence is cancelled. Indrek Reiland has recently objected to Hanks’s proposal that it faces a dilemma: either force cancellation dissolves the unity of the proposition secured by the cancelled act of assertion, or Hanks’s proposal reduces to Soames’s. In this paper, I respond to Reiland by offering an analysis of force cancellation which gets rid of the alleged dilemma. The proposal is based on a set of distinctions from speech act theory : between two senses of ’force’, two types of act, and two types of context. The role of simulation in force cancellation is emphasized, and connections drawn to broader issues such as the evolution of complex language.
    Philosophy of Linguistics
  •  374
    The Fodorian fallacy
    Analysis 62 (4): 285-89. 2002.
    In recent years Fodor has repeatedly argued that nothing epistemic can be essential to, or constitutive of, any concept. This holds in virtue of a constraint which Fodor dubs the Compositionality Constraint. I show that Fodor's argument is fallacious because it rests on an ambiguity.
    Atomist Theories of ConceptsCompositionalityConcept PossessionThe Language of Thought
  • Le présent épistolaire: une perspective cognitive
    L'Information Grammaticale 66 38-44. 1995.
    Indexicals, MiscAspects of Reference, MiscSemantics-Pragmatics DistinctionThe Nature of ContextChara…Read more
    Indexicals, MiscAspects of Reference, MiscSemantics-Pragmatics DistinctionThe Nature of ContextCharacter and Content
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