2018-01-08T07:47:05Z
2018-01-08T07:47:05Z
2016
2018-01-08T07:47:05Z
Imagination and Convention by Ernie Lepore and Matthew Stone is a sustained attack on a standard piece of contemporary philosophical lore, Grice's (1975) theory of conversational implicatures, and on indirect meanings in general. Although I agree with quite a lot of what they say, and with some important aspects of their theoretical stance, here I will respond to some of their criticism. I'll assume a characterization of implicatures as theory-neutral as possible, on which implicatures are a sort of indirectly conveyed meanings, illustrated by some traditional examples. Then I will discuss the claim that one can make an assertion indirectly, through a mechanism essentially like the one envisaged by Grice in his account of implicatures. This is something that not just L&S have argued against, but other writers as well, for more or less related reasons. Since it will be clear that assertions, the way I will characterize them, 'convey information in the usual sense' and provide 'information in the semantic sense of publicly accessible content that supports inquiry', I will be thereby arguing for a claim clearly at odds with some of those made by LΣ
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Semàntica (Filosofia); Pragmatisme; Semantics (Philosophy); Pragmatism
Jagiellonian University
Versió postprint del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.5840/pjphil20161012
Polish Journal of Philosophy, 2016, vol. 10, num. 1, p. 13-49
https://doi.org/10.5840/pjphil20161012
info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/H2020/675415/EU//DIAPHORA
(c) Jagiellonian University, 2016
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