This chapter offers a brief sketch of the normativity of linguistic meaning and then considers the opposing view of semantic anti-normativism as defended by Gluer and Wickforss. The author distinguishes between three different types of obligation (moral obligation, socially enforced obligation, and freely adopted obligation) and argues that Gluer & Wickforss's position is based on a misconstrual of semantic normativity as a source of something like moral obligation, when in fact it produces only obligation of the third type
The ideal worlds of a possible worlds semantics may satisfy both a primary obligation and an associa...
This paper is intended to promote a way of is-ought derivation, rooted in neonaturalistic solutions ...
189 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1992.This thesis is about the logi...
My three projects here explore some semantic and metaethical problems that are unique to normative l...
The question of whether meaning is inherently normative has become a central topic in philosophy and...
What is the normativity of (linguistic) meaning? What exactly does this thesis (that meaning is norm...
Normativity is what gives reasons their force, makes words meaningful, and makes rules and laws bind...
Normative language is characteristically used in ethical discussions about what we must do, what we ...
We are subject to many different norms telling us how to act, from moral norms to etiquette rules an...
Contemporary debate on the nature of meaning centres on whether meaning is normative. Agreement is w...
What do normative terms like “obligation” mean in legal contexts? On one view, which H.L.A. Hart may...
Legal discourse centrally involves a family of normative expressions - obligation, right, permi...
The present article provides a taxonomic analysis of bimodal logics of normative ideality and normat...
In this paper we formalize sanction-based obligations in the context of Searle’s construction of soc...
There is something mysterious, and perhaps even dubious, about 'ought' claims. They seem to exert an...
The ideal worlds of a possible worlds semantics may satisfy both a primary obligation and an associa...
This paper is intended to promote a way of is-ought derivation, rooted in neonaturalistic solutions ...
189 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1992.This thesis is about the logi...
My three projects here explore some semantic and metaethical problems that are unique to normative l...
The question of whether meaning is inherently normative has become a central topic in philosophy and...
What is the normativity of (linguistic) meaning? What exactly does this thesis (that meaning is norm...
Normativity is what gives reasons their force, makes words meaningful, and makes rules and laws bind...
Normative language is characteristically used in ethical discussions about what we must do, what we ...
We are subject to many different norms telling us how to act, from moral norms to etiquette rules an...
Contemporary debate on the nature of meaning centres on whether meaning is normative. Agreement is w...
What do normative terms like “obligation” mean in legal contexts? On one view, which H.L.A. Hart may...
Legal discourse centrally involves a family of normative expressions - obligation, right, permi...
The present article provides a taxonomic analysis of bimodal logics of normative ideality and normat...
In this paper we formalize sanction-based obligations in the context of Searle’s construction of soc...
There is something mysterious, and perhaps even dubious, about 'ought' claims. They seem to exert an...
The ideal worlds of a possible worlds semantics may satisfy both a primary obligation and an associa...
This paper is intended to promote a way of is-ought derivation, rooted in neonaturalistic solutions ...
189 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1992.This thesis is about the logi...