Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- 1 A simple formal language
- 2 Predicates and functors
- 3 The isomorphism problem
- 4 Quantification
- 5 Transmundism
- 6 Putnam's ‘Meaning of “meaning”’
- 7 Lewis on languages and language
- 8 Causation and semantics
- 9 Belief–desire psychology
- 10 Direct knowledge
- References
- Index
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- 1 A simple formal language
- 2 Predicates and functors
- 3 The isomorphism problem
- 4 Quantification
- 5 Transmundism
- 6 Putnam's ‘Meaning of “meaning”’
- 7 Lewis on languages and language
- 8 Causation and semantics
- 9 Belief–desire psychology
- 10 Direct knowledge
- References
- Index
Summary
This book was begun in January 1991, initially as a set of course notes for a graduate course in the philosophy of language which I taught in the fall semester of 1991 at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. In addition to my UMass students, Adriane, Bruce, Julie, David, and others, whose names appear in these pages, my lectures were attended by Lynne Baker, Ed Gettier, Phil Bricker and Barbara Partee, all of whom made valuable comments of which some even made it into the text.
A draft of the book was written up in the first three months of 1992 in the comfortable and welcome environment of the Centre for Cognitive Science at the University of Edinburgh, and some of the material was presented in a seminar there. Many people in Edinburgh made those months profitable. In particular regular sessions with Robin Cooper were especially helpful and encouraging. I would like to thank the Science and Engineering Research Council for financial support in Edinburgh.
In April of 1992 I moved to Cambridge and enjoyed the experience of living in college for the Easter term. I would express my heartfelt thanks to the Master and Fellows of St John's College for the Visiting Overseas Scholarship that I held that term. I am also grateful to Hugh Mellor and the other philosophers in Cambridge for the opportunity to give six lectures on the material in this book and for the willingness of my colleagues to engage in philosophical discussion.
Finally, to the Victoria University of Wellington for giving me 1992 as a sabbatical year, and to my department for doing without me for eighteen months, I express sincere thanks.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Language in the WorldA Philosophical Enquiry, pp. ix - xPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1994