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1
Vocabulary Matters
In: 50 Years Later ([2015]), S. 199-210
Leibniz-Zentrum Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft
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2
Internalist Deflationism: On the Limits of Ontological Investigation
Abstract: Since Frege(1879), the history of semantics identifies the meanings of natural language expressions with the mind external things they denote, be they pedestrian objects (e.g., cows and chairs), less pedestrian objects (e.g. mereological sums), or abstracta (e.g., sets of possible worlds). For the Quinean Realist, a language with such a semantics is fruitful for ontological investigation, insofar as analyzing the denotational meanings of (the constituents of) sentences in that language reveals which objects populate the (external) worldly domain. However, consigning meaning over to truth in this manner comes at a cost. The externalist thesis is only had by sacrificing the explanatory adequacy of our theory of meaning. Three arguments suggest this: first, facts about the rapid human acquisition of natural language suggests that languages are internal to the human mind, as an innate module in cognitive architecture; second, naturalist commitments suggest that there is no sui generis, mind-independent kind `word' to stand in the word-to-world relations posited by the externalist; third, natural languages exhibit lexical flexibility, as manifest in the distribution of natural language speaker judgments, and this property cannot be easily explained by an externalist semantics. The Realist might respond to these arguments by appealing to the languages utilized to express our best scientific theories, using those invented languages as ontological guides. Since these scientific languages are constructed with the expressed purpose of perspicuously describing reality, the Realist could contend that expressions in those languages have an externalist semantics. I argue, using examples from evolutionary biology, that scientific languages exhibit lexical flexibility as well, casting doubt on the claim that these languages have meanings that admit to externalist treatment. The Realist then should reject the metaphysical methodology which assumes the externalist thesis that the meaning of a linguistic expression determines its truth-conditions.
Keyword: Externalism; Internalism; Linguistics; Metaontology; Metaphysics; Philosophy; Philosophy of Language; Realism
URL: https://doi.org/10.13016/M2GG97
http://hdl.handle.net/1903/16693
BASE
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3
The biolinguistic enterprise: New perspectives on the evolution and nature of the human language faculty (review)
In: Language. - Washington, DC : Linguistic Society of America 88 (2012) 3, 637-640
OLC Linguistik
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4
THE SEMANTICS OF PROPER NAMES AND OTHER BARE NOMINALS
Izumi, Yu. - 2012
BASE
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5
On Utterance Interpretation and Metalinguistic-Semantic Competence
BASE
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6
Without Specifiers: Phrase Structure and Events
Lohndal, Terje. - 2012
BASE
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7
Interrogatives, instructions, and I-languages: an I-semantics for questions
In: Linguistic analysis. - Vashon Island, Wash. : Linguistic Analysis 37 (2011) 3-4, 459-516
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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8
Interface transparency and the psychosemantics of "most"
In: Natural language semantics. - Dordrecht : Springer 19 (2011) 3, 227-256
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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9
Poverty of the stimulus revisited
In: Cognitive science. - Hoboken, NJ : Wiley-Blackwell 35 (2011) 7, 1207-1242
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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10
Minimal semantic instructions
In: The Oxford handbook of linguistic minimalism (2011), S. 472-498
Leibniz-Zentrum Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft
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11
Concepts, meanings and truth: first nature, second nature and hard work
In: Mind & language. - Oxford : Wiley-Blackwell 25 (2010) 3, 247-278
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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12
Jerry A. Fodor: LOT 2 [Rezension]
In: The journal of philosophy. - New York, NY : The Journal of Philosophy, Inc. 107 (2010) 12, 653-658
BLLDB
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13
Basic operations: minimal syntax-semantics
In: Catalan journal of linguistics. - Bellaterra : Univ., Servei de Publ. 8 (2009), 113-139
BLLDB
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14
The meaning of "most": semantics, numerosity and psychology
In: Mind & language. - Oxford : Wiley-Blackwell 24 (2009) 5, 554-585
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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15
From numerical concepts to concepts of number : [including open peer commentary and authors' response]
Halberda, Justin (Komm.); Lourenco, Stella F. (Komm.); Smith, Leslie (Komm.)...
In: Behavioral and brain sciences. - New York, NY [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press 31 (2008) 6, 623-687
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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16
Minimalist Meaning, Internalist Interpretation
In: BIOLINGUISTICS; Vol. 2 No. 4 (2008); 317-341 ; 1450-3417 (2008)
BASE
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17
Induction and comparison
In: Working papers in linguistics. - College Park, MD 15 (2007), 154-188
BLLDB
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18
Is generative grammar deceptively simple or simply deceptive?
In: Lingua <Amsterdam>. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Elsevier 116 (2006) 1, 64-68
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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19
Everyone Knows, Therefore Every Child Knows: An Investigation of Logico-semantic Competence in Child Language
Minai, Utako. - 2006
BASE
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20
Events and semantic architecture
Pietroski, Paul M.. - Oxford [u.a.] : Oxford Univ. Press, 2005
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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