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103Critical Notice Defending the Martian ArgumentDisputatio 1 (20): 336-345. 2006.The Chomskian holds that the grammars that linguists produce are about human psycholinguistic structures, i.e. our mastery of a grammar, our linguistic competence. But if we encountered Martians whose psycho-linguistic processes differed from ours, but who nevertheless produced sentences that are extensionally equivalent to the set of sentences in our English and shared our judgements on the grammaticality of various English sentences, then we would count them as being competent in English. A gr…Read more
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163An Agon Aesthetics of FootballSport, Ethics and Philosophy 9 (2): 97-123. 2015.In this article, I first address the ethical considerations about football and show that a meritocratic-fairness view of sports fails to capture the phenomenon of football. Fairness of result is not at centre stage in football. Football is about the drama, about the tension and the emotions it provokes. This moves us to the realm of aesthetics. I reject the idea of the aesthetics of football as the disinterested aesthetic appreciation, which traditionally has been deemed central to aesthetics. I…Read more
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37Talking to Infants: A Gricean PerspectiveAmerican Philosophical Quarterly 50 (4): 423. 2013.According to Paul Grice, when we address someone, we intend to make ourselves understood, partly by the addressee’s recognition of that intention. Call this set of nested audience-directed intentions an M-intention. The standard Gricean analysis of speaker’s meaning goes as follows: “U meant something by uttering x” is true iff, for some audience A, U uttered x intending: (1) A to produce a particular response r (2) A to think (recognize) that U intends (1) (3) A to fulfill (1) on the basis of h…Read more
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81Intentions and CompositionalityProceedings of the Xxii World Congress of Philosophy 39 13-19. 2008.It has been argued that philosophers that base their theories of meaning on communicative intentions and language conventions cannot accommodate the fact that natural languages are compositional. In this paper I show that if we pay careful attention to Grice’s notion of “resultant procedures” we see that this is not the case. The argument, if we leave out all the technicalities, is fairly simple. Resultant procedures tell you how to combine utterance parts, like words, into larger units, like se…Read more
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1709All You Zombies. David Chalmers’ Metaphysical SolipsismIn Uwe Meixner & Peter Simons (eds.), Metaphysics in the Post-Metaphysical Age: Papers of the 22nd International Wittgenstein Symposium, Austrian Ludwig Wittgenstein Society. 1999.
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1134Communication, Conflict and CooperationProtoSociology 29. 2012.According to Steven Pinker and his associates the cooperative model of human communication fails, because evolutionary biology teaches us that most social relationships, including talk-exchange, involve combinations of cooperation and conflict. In particular, the phenomenon of the strategic speaker who uses indirect speech in order to be able to deny what he meant by a speech act (deniability of conversational implicatures) challenges the model. In reply I point out that interlocutors can aim at…Read more
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111Sport Records Are Social FactsSport, Ethics and Philosophy 9 (4): 351-362. 2015.In this paper I address the topic of sport records and concentrate on the ontology of sport records. I argue that sport records are social facts in the sense that sport records not only depend on the physical facts of sport competitions, but also on the attitude we take towards the phenomenon—our attitude is partly constitutive of the phenomenon of sport records. In particular, the Mieto–Wassberg incident and the Larsson–McKee incident show that performance records should also be regarded as soc…Read more
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201Counterpart Theory and the Argument from Modal ConcernsTheoria 72 (4): 269-285. 2006.Kripke complained that counterpart theory makes modal claims be about counterparts and not about us, and that it is a misguided model of modality since we do not care about counterparts in the same way we care about ourselves. The first part of the complaint, I argue, has been met by Hazen and Lewis, while the second can be countered by observing that most of our modal concerns are about role‐fillers and that counterparts are well‐suited to such concerns. The role‐filler analysis of modal concer…Read more
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29A Call for a Possible World Argument in EthicsTeorema: International Journal of Philosophy 19 (1): 105-117. 2000.
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126Watching Sport: Aesthetics, Ethics and EmotionSport, Ethics and Philosophy 6 (3): 401-406. 2012.
Steffen Borge
Nord University
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Nord UniversityRegular Faculty
Areas of Specialization
| Philosophy of Sport |
| The Nature of Sport |
| Sports Ethics |
| Philosophy of Sport, Misc |
| Topics in the Philosophy of Sport |