E-Book, Englisch, 148 Seiten
ISBN: 978-3-11-032118-0
Verlag: De Gruyter
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
- Geisteswissenschaften Philosophie Sprachphilosophie
- Geisteswissenschaften Sprachwissenschaft Semantik & Pragmatik
- Geisteswissenschaften Philosophie Metaphysik, Ontologie
- Geisteswissenschaften Philosophie Erkenntnistheorie
- Geisteswissenschaften Sprachwissenschaft Sprachwissenschaften Sprachphilosophie
Weitere Infos & Material
1;Acknowledgements;7
2;Introduction;9
3;I. The metaphysics of meaning;11
3.1;1. What is meant;11
3.2;2. What is said;14
3.2.1;2.1. Utterance-type meaning;14
3.2.2;2.2. Different notions of what is said;17
3.2.3;2.3. Grice’s definition;19
3.2.3.1;2.3.1. A first attempt;19
3.2.3.2;2.3.2. Conventional implicatures;20
3.2.3.3;2.3.3. Central meaning;23
3.2.4;2.4. A different definition;28
3.2.4.1;2.4.1. The myth of conventional implicatures;28
3.2.4.2;2.4.2. What is primarily said;30
3.2.4.3;2.4.3. One more improvement;32
3.2.5;2.5. The full identification of what is said;33
3.2.5.1;2.5.1. Ambiguities;33
3.2.5.2;2.5.2. Indexicals;34
3.2.5.3;2.5.3. The time of utterance;36
3.2.5.4;2.5.4. Inexplicit references;36
3.2.5.5;2.5.5. Definite descriptions;37
3.2.5.6;2.5.6. Quantifiers;38
3.2.5.7;2.5.7. Comparative adjectives;39
3.2.6;2.6. The problem of semantic underdetermination;40
3.2.6.1;2.6.1. Semantic underdetermination;40
3.2.6.2;2.6.2. Against universal underdetermination;43
3.2.6.3;2.6.3. Against semantic minimalism;49
3.2.7;2.7. The solution: An extended notion of what is said;53
3.2.7.1;2.7.1. Definition;54
3.2.7.2;2.7.2. What is said and what is implicated;55
3.2.7.3;2.7.3. What is said and semantics;64
3.2.7.4;2.7.4. Against restricting the notion of what is said;72
3.3;3. What is implicated;78
3.3.1;3.1. Grice’s definition of implicature;78
3.3.2;3.2. Grice’s theory of conversational implicature;79
3.3.3;3.3. What is implicated and what is meant;86
3.3.4;3.4. What is implicated and what is said;92
4;II. The epistemology of meaning;94
4.1;1. Understanding what is meant;95
4.2;2. How we understand what is meant;96
4.2.1;2.1. The code theory;96
4.2.2;2.2. A Gricean theory;99
4.2.2.1;2.2.1. Rationality;99
4.2.2.2;2.2.2. Grice’s theory of implicature derivation;100
4.2.2.3;2.2.3. A Gricean theory of understanding;103
4.2.2.4;2.2.4. The differentiation problem;105
4.2.3;2.3. Sperber and Wilson’s relevance theory;107
4.2.3.1;2.3.1. The theory;108
4.2.3.2;2.3.2. The differentiation problem;117
4.2.3.3;2.3.3. Magic and ungrounded immunization;119
4.2.4;2.4. The game-theoretic theory;121
4.2.4.1;2.4.1. Game theory;122
4.2.4.2;2.4.2. Signaling games;124
4.2.4.3;2.4.3. Games of partial information;127
4.2.4.4;2.4.4. A new definition of speaker meaning?;129
4.2.4.5;2.4.5. How we understand what is meant;133
5;Conclusion;135
6;References;138
7;Index of names;149