Readership: Advanced students and scholars of philosophy of language and linguistics
Edited by Gerhard Preyer, University of Frankfurt, and Georg Peter, University of Frankfurt
Herman Cappelen: Introduction: Semantics and Pragmatics: Some Central Issues Part I: The Defence of Moderate Contextualism 1: Peter Pagin, Francis Jeffry Pelletier: Content, Context and Composition 2: Kenneth A. Taylor: A Little Sensitivity goes a Long Way 3: Kepa Korta and John Perry: Radical Minimalism, Moderate Contextualism 4: Ishani Maitra: How and Why to Be a Moderate Contextualist 5: Sarah-Jane Leslie: Moderately Insensitive Semantics 6: Eros Corazza and Jerome Dokic: Sense and Insensitivity: Or where Minimalism meets Contextualism 7: Elisabeth Camp: Prudent Semantics Meets Wanton Speech Act Pluralism Part II: On Critiques of Semantic Minimalism 8: Jay Atlas: How Insensitive Can You Be? Meanings, Propositions, Context, and Semantical Underdeterminacy 9: John MacFarlane: Semantic Minimalism and Nonindexical Contextualism 10: Lenny Clapp: Minimal (Disagreement about) Semantics 11: Reinaldo Elugardo: Minimal Propositions, Cognitive Safety Mechanisms, and Psychological Reality 12: Philip Robbins: Minimalism and Modularity 13: Henry Jackman: Minimalism, Psychological Reality, Meaning and Use Part II: Back to Semantic Minimalism 14: Emma Borg: Minimalism versus Contextualism in Semantics Index
Review in ProtoSociology
Please note, this offer price only applies to individual customers when ordering direct from Oxford University Press, while stock lasts. No further discounts will apply. If you are a bookseller, please contact your OUP sales representative.