Ian Rumfitt has recently drawn our attention to a couple of paradoxes of signification, claiming that although Thomas Bradwardine's "multiple-meanings'' account of truth and signification can solve the first of them, it cannot solve the second. Bradwardine's solution appears to turn on a distinction between the principal and the consequential signification of an utterance. The paradoxes of signification were in fact much discussed by Bradwardine's successors in the fourteenth century. It is shown that Bradwardine's account of signification turns not on a distinction between principal and consequential signification, but between partial and total signification, and that accordingly his solution, unlike those of his successors, does not fall ...
The 'no'-'no' paradox (so-called by Sorensen) consists of a pair of propositions each of which says ...
The present work was funded by Leverhulme Trust Research Project Grant RPG-2016-333: “Theories of Pa...
International audienceThe Liar Paradox challenges logicians’ and semanticists’ theories of truth and...
Ian Rumfitt has recently drawn our attention to a couple of paradoxes of signification, claiming tha...
In recent years, speech-act theory has mooted the possibility that one utterance can signify a numbe...
Thomas Bradwardine's solution to the semantic paradoxes, presented in his Insolubilia written in Oxf...
In line with the Principle of Uniform Solution, Graham Priest has challenged advocates like myself o...
Bradwardine’s solution to the the logical paradoxes depends on the idea that every sentence signifie...
We can divide medieval discussions of the insolubles—logical paradoxes such as the Liar—into two mai...
In his article "Verdades antiguas y modernas" (in the same issue, pp. 207-27), David Miller criticis...
Fourteenth-century treatises on paradoxes of the liar family, especially Bradwardine's and Buridan's...
Some fourteenth‐century treatises on paradoxes of the liar family offer a promising starting‐point f...
The most exciting and innovative period in the discussion of the insolubles (i.e., logical paradoxes...
This book, officially a contribution to the subject area of Charles Peirce’s semiotics, deserves a w...
Abstract. Despite the volume of discussion on the Liar Paradox recently, there is one stream of larg...
The 'no'-'no' paradox (so-called by Sorensen) consists of a pair of propositions each of which says ...
The present work was funded by Leverhulme Trust Research Project Grant RPG-2016-333: “Theories of Pa...
International audienceThe Liar Paradox challenges logicians’ and semanticists’ theories of truth and...
Ian Rumfitt has recently drawn our attention to a couple of paradoxes of signification, claiming tha...
In recent years, speech-act theory has mooted the possibility that one utterance can signify a numbe...
Thomas Bradwardine's solution to the semantic paradoxes, presented in his Insolubilia written in Oxf...
In line with the Principle of Uniform Solution, Graham Priest has challenged advocates like myself o...
Bradwardine’s solution to the the logical paradoxes depends on the idea that every sentence signifie...
We can divide medieval discussions of the insolubles—logical paradoxes such as the Liar—into two mai...
In his article "Verdades antiguas y modernas" (in the same issue, pp. 207-27), David Miller criticis...
Fourteenth-century treatises on paradoxes of the liar family, especially Bradwardine's and Buridan's...
Some fourteenth‐century treatises on paradoxes of the liar family offer a promising starting‐point f...
The most exciting and innovative period in the discussion of the insolubles (i.e., logical paradoxes...
This book, officially a contribution to the subject area of Charles Peirce’s semiotics, deserves a w...
Abstract. Despite the volume of discussion on the Liar Paradox recently, there is one stream of larg...
The 'no'-'no' paradox (so-called by Sorensen) consists of a pair of propositions each of which says ...
The present work was funded by Leverhulme Trust Research Project Grant RPG-2016-333: “Theories of Pa...
International audienceThe Liar Paradox challenges logicians’ and semanticists’ theories of truth and...