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Reinaldo Elugardo

University of Oklahoma
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    38
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 More details
  • University of Oklahoma
    Department of Philosophy
    Professor Emeritus
University of Western Ontario
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 1980
Homepage
Norman, Oklahoma, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
Philosophy of Language
Philosophy of Mind
Areas of Interest
Epistemology
Metaphysics
Philosophy of Mind
17th/18th Century Philosophy
  • All publications (38)
  •  137
    Review of Anandi Hattiangadi, Oughts and Thoughts: Scepticism and the Normativity of Meaning (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2008 (4). 2008.
    Normativity of Meaning and Content
  •  131
    Landesman on abstract particulars
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 35 (3): 411-414. 1975.
  • Explaining Beliefs: Lynne Rudder Baker and Her Critics
    Stanford: CSLI Publications. 2001.
    Propositional Attitudes, Misc
  •  92
    Against weak psychophysical supervenience
    Dialectica 42 (2): 129-43. 1988.
    Psychophysical Supervenience
  •  68
    Woods on "metaphysics" zeta, chapter 13
    Apeiron 9 (1). 1975.
    Ancient Greek and Roman PhilosophyClassical Greek Philosophy
  •  52
    On an alleged incoherence in Morick's thesis of extensionality and intentionality
    Philosophical Studies 28 (2). 1975.
    Intentionality, Misc
  •  86
    Grasping objects and contents
    with Robert J. Stainton
    In Alex Barber (ed.), Epistemology of language, Oxford University Press. pp. 257-302. 2003.
    Aspects of ConsciousnessSingular Propositions
  •  57
    Descriptions, Indexicals and Speaker Meaning
    ProtoSociology 10 155-190. 1997.
    In his paper, “Descriptions, Indexicals, and Belief Reports: Some Dilemmas (But Not the Ones You Expect)” (Mind 104, (1995)), Stephen Schiffer presents a powerful argument against anyone who accepts a Russellian account of definite descriptions (including incomplete descriptions) and who also accepts a direct referential account of indexicals. On the one hand, the most plausible version of the Theory of Descriptions, namely, the Hidden-Indexical Theory of Descriptions, entails that a speaker who…Read more
    In his paper, “Descriptions, Indexicals, and Belief Reports: Some Dilemmas (But Not the Ones You Expect)” (Mind 104, (1995)), Stephen Schiffer presents a powerful argument against anyone who accepts a Russellian account of definite descriptions (including incomplete descriptions) and who also accepts a direct referential account of indexicals. On the one hand, the most plausible version of the Theory of Descriptions, namely, the Hidden-Indexical Theory of Descriptions, entails that a speaker who uses an incomplete description, “the F”, referentially means some description-theoretic, object-independent proposition by an utterance of a sentence of the form, “The F is G”. On the other hand, since speaker meaning supervenes on one’s psychological states, what holds for referential uses of incomplete descriptions must also hold for referential uses of indexicals and demonstatives. In other words, speakers who produce literal, referential, indexical utterances of the form, “" is G” also mean some description-theoretic proposition by their utterances. Furthermore, the Russellian has no non-arbitrary reason for preferring a direct referential account of indexicals, which he should accept, to a rival, incompatible account which treats indexicals as disguised descriptions. In my paper, I argue that the Russellian does have such a reason: the rival account cannot explain all the relevant speaker meaning facts that the direct reference theory can. I conclude the paper by defending the Russellian view that, in producing a referential utterance of “the F is G”, a speaker can mean a description-theoretic proposition and, in addition, mean an object-dependent proposition involving the speaker’s referent.
    Semantics
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