Constructional vs. Denotational Conception of Aboutness

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RACLAVSKÝ Jiří

Rok publikování 2014
Druh Článek v odborném periodiku
Časopis / Zdroj Organon F : international journal of analytic philosophy
Fakulta / Pracoviště MU

Filozofická fakulta

Citace
www http://www.klemens.sav.sk/fiusav/organon/organon_counter.php?year=2014&number=2&pages=219-236
Obor Filosofie a náboženství
Klíčová slova aboutness; principle of subject matter; logical semantics; logical analysis of natural language
Popis Following Carnap's Principle of Subject Matter, Pavel Tichý proposed a methodological principle I call the "Denotational Principle of Aboutness". It says that expressions are about their denotata. Denotata are modelled as possible world intensions or (common) extensions. Nearly the same principle was recently defended by Marie Duží and Pavel Materna under the name the "Parmenides Principle". However, Duží and Materna did not react to Tichý's late proposal which I call the "Constructional Principle of Aboutness". It says that the subject matter of expressions consists not in their denotata but their meanings. The meanings are explicated by Tichý, and also by Duží and Materna, as so-called constructions; constructions are complex entities akin to algorithms, they construct intensions or extensions. In this paper, I argue in favour of the Constructional Principle of Aboutness. I show that there are not only single arguments, but whole net of methodological principles which support it. This is why the topic largely transcends the debate among Tichý's followers.
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