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    Drawing Distinctions: The Varieties of Graphic Expression
    Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 65 (2): 235-238. 2007.
  •  54
    Expression and transaction in illocutionary acts
    European Journal of Philosophy 27 (3): 758-766. 2019.
  •  21
    Response to Gut Reactions
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 76 (3): 720-728. 2008.
  •  4
    The Pleasure of Ulteriority: Four Essays on Verbal Metaphor
    Dissertation, Princeton University. 2004.
    Metaphor is a semantic phenomenon, in that it involves the assigning of distinctively metaphorical truth conditions to sentences and distinctively metaphorical semantic values to some of the words and phrases that figure in these sentences. It is also an aesthetic phenomenon, in that an intelligible metaphorical utterance always exhibits some degree of aptness, and an audience's efforts to understand such an utterance always involve efforts to make the best of it, finding it as apt as its words …Read more
  •  79
    Problems of paraphrase: Bottom’s dream
    The Baltic International Yearbook of Cognition, Logic and Communication 3. 2007.
    Philosophers and critics alike often contend that metaphors cannot or should not be paraphrased, ever. Yet a simple and decisive empirical argument — The Horse’s Mouth Argument—suffices to show that many metaphors can be paraphrased without violating the spirit in which they were put forward in the first place. This argument leaves us with urgent unanswered questions about the role of paraphrase in a more inclusive division of exegetical labor, about the tension between its notorious openendedne…Read more
  •  182
    Aptness and Truth in Verbal Metaphor
    Philosophical Topics 25 (1): 117-153. 1997.
  •  182
    Metaphor
    In Edward N. Zalta (ed.), The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, The Metaphysics Research Lab. 2014.
  •  48
    Metaphor in Context (review)
    Philosophical Review 111 (3): 473-478. 2002.
    The unit of metaphor isn’t always a complete sentence; often it is a single word or phrase. In such a case, the word or phrase in question makes a nonstandard, metaphorically determined contribution to the propositional content of the sentence in which it appears, a content whose other ingredients are determined in routine ways by routine recursive procedures of truth-conditional semantics. In this respect, metaphor belongs to semantics. In other respects, it doesn’t belong to semantics at all. …Read more
  •  147
    Objects of Metaphor (review)
    Philosophical Review 118 (1): 134-138. 2009.
  •  150
    The what and the how of metaphorical imagining, Part One
    Philosophical Studies 174 (1): 13--31. 2017.
    We humans are remarkably interested in and skilled at games of make believe, games whose rules make what we are called on to imagine depend on what’s actually perceivably true about things and people that have what it takes to assume various fictional roles and that thereby function in the games as props. For the most part we play these games on an improvised pickup basis, working out the rules we play by in the very act of playing by them. Part of what makes this coordinative feat possible are …Read more
  •  127
    Cavell on expression
    with Stanley Cavell
    Journal of Philosophy 77 (11): 745-746. 1980.