One claim about I, regularly made and almost universally endorsed, is that uses of the term are logically guaranteed to refer successfully (if they refer at all). The claim is only rarely formulated perspicuously or argued for. Such obscurity helps disguise the fact that those who profess to advance the claim actually turn out to support not a logical guarantee at all but merely high security through fortunate coincidence. This is not surprising. For we have no good reason to accept the claim – granted, any use of I is apt to refer successfully; but that can be explained by pragmatic features of its use. And we have some reason to reject the claim – it is notoriously difficult to see how genuine reference and guaranteed success do not exclu...
Central to communication are acts of reference, in which speakers clarify to hearers the identity of...
Reference is of fundamental importance in natural language semantics. In Formal Semantics, reference...
In the debate over what determines the reference of an indexical expression on a given occasion of u...
Abstract I argue for the following claims: [1] all uses of I (the word ‘I’ or thought-element I) are...
I argue that the idea of reference failure which is frequently mentioned and occasionally argued for...
Wittgenstein once made a distinction between two uses of "I". The first use, as object, as in "I hav...
Nimtz C. Reassessing Referential Indeterminacy. Erkenntnis. 2005;62(1):1-28.Quine and Davidson emplo...
A standard view of reference holds that a speaker's use of a name refers to a certain thing in virtu...
Introduction: ", "you", "here" are deictic expressions or indexicals, whose references depend on the...
Referring is not something an expression does; it is something that someone can use an expression to...
What are the conditions for fixing the reference of a proper name? Debate on this point has recently...
Introduction: ", "you", "here" are deictic expressions or indexicals, whose references depend on the...
Although reference is principally a matter of identification or designation (Frege 1892, Russell 190...
Whether a predicate is a referential expression depends upon what reference is conceived to be. Even...
A substantial amount of recent work in natural language generation has focused on the generation of ...
Central to communication are acts of reference, in which speakers clarify to hearers the identity of...
Reference is of fundamental importance in natural language semantics. In Formal Semantics, reference...
In the debate over what determines the reference of an indexical expression on a given occasion of u...
Abstract I argue for the following claims: [1] all uses of I (the word ‘I’ or thought-element I) are...
I argue that the idea of reference failure which is frequently mentioned and occasionally argued for...
Wittgenstein once made a distinction between two uses of "I". The first use, as object, as in "I hav...
Nimtz C. Reassessing Referential Indeterminacy. Erkenntnis. 2005;62(1):1-28.Quine and Davidson emplo...
A standard view of reference holds that a speaker's use of a name refers to a certain thing in virtu...
Introduction: ", "you", "here" are deictic expressions or indexicals, whose references depend on the...
Referring is not something an expression does; it is something that someone can use an expression to...
What are the conditions for fixing the reference of a proper name? Debate on this point has recently...
Introduction: ", "you", "here" are deictic expressions or indexicals, whose references depend on the...
Although reference is principally a matter of identification or designation (Frege 1892, Russell 190...
Whether a predicate is a referential expression depends upon what reference is conceived to be. Even...
A substantial amount of recent work in natural language generation has focused on the generation of ...
Central to communication are acts of reference, in which speakers clarify to hearers the identity of...
Reference is of fundamental importance in natural language semantics. In Formal Semantics, reference...
In the debate over what determines the reference of an indexical expression on a given occasion of u...