PHILOSOPHICAL SEMANTICS AND TERM MEANING
by
Book Details
About the Book
In this book the author presents a meanings-as-entities view of term meaning utilizing set theory. In doing so the author discusses limitations of customary formal semantic theories, argues for the primacy of term meaning, provides an account of analyticity based on synonymy, discusses possible-worlds semantics, provides a defense of our traditional—and common-sense—view of meanings as entities, and sketches an approach to bridging the gap between formal semantics and natural language. The author discusses the views of many philosophers, including Carnap, Donnellan, Hintikka, Kripke, Linsky, Quine, Russell, and Searle.
About the Author
Charles Schlee has a Ph.D. in philosophy from the University of Kansas with specialization in the philosophy of language. Dr. Schlee wrote his dissertation on Bertrand Russell’s theory of definite descriptions and has done extensive research in the area of philosophical semantics.