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133Direct reference and significant cognition: Any paradoxes?1Philosophical Books 47 (1): 2-14. 2006.
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175The Plenitude of Structures and Scarcity of PossibilitiesJournal of Philosophy 88 (11): 620-622. 1991.
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50Having In Mind: The Philosophy of Keith Donnellan (edited book)Oxford University Press. 2011.Keith Donnellan of UCLA is one of the founding fathers of contemporary philosophy of language, along with David Kaplan and Saul Kripke. Donnellan was and is an extremely creative thinker whose insights reached into metaphysics, action theory, the history of philosophy, and of course the philosophy of mind and language. This volume collects the best critical essays on Donnellan's forty-year body of work. The pieces by such noted philosophers as Tyler Burge, David Kaplan, and John Perry, discuss D…Read more
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153A Unified Treatment of (Pro-) Nominals in Ordinary EnglishIn Andrea Bianchi (ed.), On reference, Oxford University Press Uk. 2015.The interpretation of pronouns and anaphora in ordinary English has been analyzed within a variety of frameworks in formal semantics as involving variables and variable-binding operators. This chapter challenges the widely held assumption that English nominals, including pronouns, can be understood within the syntactic-derivational and model-theoretical frameworks of predicate logic. The first section of the chapter outlines a program for a directly referential semantics of English nominals and …Read more
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161Cogito?: Descartes and thinking the worldOxford University Press. 2008.Decartes' maxim Cogito, Ergo Sum (from his Meditations) is perhaps the most famous philosophical expression ever coined. Joseph Almog is a Descartes analyst whose last book WHAT AM I? focused on the second half of this expression, Sum-who is the "I" who is existing-and-thinking and how does this entity somehow incorporate both body and mind? This volume looks at the first half of the proposition-cogito. Almog calls this the "thinking man's paradox": how can there be, in the the natural world and…Read more
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111Referential Mechanics: Direct Reference and the Foundations of SemanticsOxford University Press. 2014.This volume is focused on understanding a key idea in modern semantics-direct reference-and its integration into a general semantics for natural language.
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120In Everything in Its Right Place, Joseph Almog develops the unitarian and universalist metaphysics of Spinoza.
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766What Am I?: Descartes and the Mind-Body ProblemOxford University Press. 2001.In his Meditations, Rene Descartes asks, "what am I?" His initial answer is "a man." But he soon discards it: "But what is a man? Shall I say 'a rational animal'? No: for then I should inquire what an animal is, what rationality is, and in this way one question would lead down the slope to harder ones." Instead of understanding what a man is, Descartes shifts to two new questions: "What is Mind?" and "What is Body?" These questions develop into Descartes's main philosophical preoccupation: the M…Read more
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24Perhaps (?), New logical foundations are needed for quantum mechanicsLogique Et Analyse 21 (82): 251. 1978.
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174Is a Unified Description of Language-and-Thought Possible?Journal of Philosophy 102 (10): 493-531. 2005.
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1The Vernacular and the Omniscient Observer of HistoryIn Marga Reimer & Anne Bezuidenhout (eds.), Descriptions and beyond, Oxford University Press. 2004.
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232Précis of what am I? (review)Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 70 (3): 696-8211. 2005.What Am I? is so-called because of its focus on Descartes’ primal question in the mind-body realm and his primal answer, viz. “a man”. The question and answer are primal in both senses of the adjective: they come first, early in meditation II, when the topic is broached for the first time; and, in my view of Descartes, they are also the most fundamental question and answer. There are other questions—many many other questions—Descartes raises about the mind-body problem. Some came to substitute f…Read more
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50David Kaplan: the man at workIn Joseph Almog & Paolo Leonardi (eds.), The philosophy of David Kaplan, Oxford University Press. pp. 1. 2009.This chapter presents an introduction to David Kaplan. Topics covered include the influence of Church, Carnap, and Montague, from whom Kaplan got the eye for elegant formal codifications; Kaplan's admiration and adoption of the work of the German logician Gottlob Frege as the ground philosophical framework; his most influential work, _Demonstratives_, which presented his pioneering account of “direct reference” and what is essentially a two‐stage theory of meaning; and his separation of semantic…Read more