•  129
    In the present version of these lecture notes only a number of typos and a few glaring mistakes have been corrected. Thanks to Paul Dekker for his help in this respect. No attempt has been been made to update the original text or to incorporate new insights and approaches. For a more recent overview, see our ‘Questions’ in the Handbook of Logic and Language (edited by Johan van Benthem and Alice ter Meulen, Elsevier, 1997).
  •  224
    What Cost Naturalism?
    In Wiebke Petersen & Kata Balogh (eds.), BRIDGE 2014 Proceedings, University of Duesselfors Press. forthcoming.
    The paper traces some of the assumptions that have informed conservative naturalism in linguistic theory, critically examines their justification, and proposes a more liberal alternative.
  •  128
    Why compositionality?
    In Greg Carlson & J. Pelletier (eds.), Reference and Quantification: The Partee Effect, Csli Press. pp. 83-106. 2005.
    The paper identifies some background assumptions of compositionality in formal semantics and investigates how they shape formal semantics as a scientific discipline.
  •  134
    The Company of Objects / Het Gezelschap der Dingen
    In Kasper Tine and Andreasen Melzer (ed.), Inventory, Johan Deumens. 2008.
    Objects come to us, and we to them, in many different ways: by touch, vision, smell; in thought, language, imagination. We access them directly and manipulate them; or we approach them indirectly and keep our distance. Sometimes we do so at the same time: we pick up an object and ask ourselves where we bought it, or what it is for; we look at an object and admire its shape or colour. But often we simply take the object and use it, and neither its material properties, nor its history need concern …Read more
  •  94
    Hand or Hammer? On formal and natural languages in semantics
    Journal of Indian Philosophy 35 (5-6): 597-626. 2007.
    This paper does not deal with the topic of ‘the generosity of artificial languages from an Asian or a comparative perspective’. Rather, it is concerned with a particular case taken from a development in the Western tradition, when in the wake of the rise of formal logic at the end of the nineteenth and the beginning of the twentieth century people in philosophy and later in linguistics started to use formal languages in the study of the semantics of natural languages. This undertaking rests on ce…Read more