Sentences such as 'Chocolate tastes good' have been widely discussed as sentences that give rise to faultless disagreement. As such, they actually belong to the more general class of impersonal perception reports, which include 'The violin sounds / looks strange' as well sentences that are about an agent-centered situation such as 'It feels / seems like it is going to rain'. I maintain the view that faultless disagreement is due to first person-based genericity, which, roughly, consists in attributing a property to anyone the speaker (or described agent) identifies with (which generally requires a first-person experience) (Moltmann 2010). Unlike my previous analysis (and similar analyses), this paper no longer makes use of experiencers or j...
This paper is about what Ninan (2014) (following Wollheim 1980) calls the Acquaintance Inference (AI...
A number of proposals have been recently made that converge towards the idea that the truth value of...
According to contextualism, the extension of claims of personal taste is dependent on the context of...
Sentences such as 'Chocolate tastes good' have been widely discussed as sentences that give rise to ...
In theoretical work about the language of personal taste, the canonical example is the simple predic...
Simple sentences containing predicates like "tasty" and "beautiful" typically suggest that the speak...
Simple sentences containing predicates like "tasty" and "beautiful" typically suggest that the speak...
Judgments of personal taste such as “Haggis is delicious” are puzzling. On the one hand they express...
Simple taste predications come with an `acquaintance requirement': they require the speaker to have...
We discuss two psycholinguistic experiments on subjective adjectives, with the aim of testing the id...
Utterances of simple sentences containing taste predicates (e.g. "delicious", "fun", "frightening") ...
This chapter compares simple predicates of personal taste (PPTs) such as tasty and beautiful with ...
We offer a new account of the semantics of predicates of personal taste (PPTs) like tasty and fun wh...
In this paper, I take issue with an idea that has emerged from recent relativist proposals, and, in ...
This paper is about what Ninan (2014) (following Wollheim 1980) calls the Acquaintance Inference (AI...
A number of proposals have been recently made that converge towards the idea that the truth value of...
According to contextualism, the extension of claims of personal taste is dependent on the context of...
Sentences such as 'Chocolate tastes good' have been widely discussed as sentences that give rise to ...
In theoretical work about the language of personal taste, the canonical example is the simple predic...
Simple sentences containing predicates like "tasty" and "beautiful" typically suggest that the speak...
Simple sentences containing predicates like "tasty" and "beautiful" typically suggest that the speak...
Judgments of personal taste such as “Haggis is delicious” are puzzling. On the one hand they express...
Simple taste predications come with an `acquaintance requirement': they require the speaker to have...
We discuss two psycholinguistic experiments on subjective adjectives, with the aim of testing the id...
Utterances of simple sentences containing taste predicates (e.g. "delicious", "fun", "frightening") ...
This chapter compares simple predicates of personal taste (PPTs) such as tasty and beautiful with ...
We offer a new account of the semantics of predicates of personal taste (PPTs) like tasty and fun wh...
In this paper, I take issue with an idea that has emerged from recent relativist proposals, and, in ...
This paper is about what Ninan (2014) (following Wollheim 1980) calls the Acquaintance Inference (AI...
A number of proposals have been recently made that converge towards the idea that the truth value of...
According to contextualism, the extension of claims of personal taste is dependent on the context of...