Pursuing Meaning

Author:   Emma Borg (University of Reading)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
ISBN:  

9780198738985


Pages:   262
Publication Date:   09 April 2015
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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Pursuing Meaning


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Full Product Details

Author:   Emma Borg (University of Reading)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
Imprint:   Oxford University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.10cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 23.10cm
Weight:   0.402kg
ISBN:  

9780198738985


ISBN 10:   0198738986
Pages:   262
Publication Date:   09 April 2015
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

1: Surveying the Terrain 2: Minimal Semantics and Psychological Evidence 3: Propositionalism and Some Problem Cases 4: Intention-Sensitive Expressions 5: Ontological Arguments Against Minimal Word Meanings 6: The Methodological Argument Against Minimal Word Meanings Bibliography Index

Reviews

The book is very clearly written and structured, and it is informed not just by the philosophical debate, but also by developments in linguistics and cognitive science. In addition, Borg's configuration of a very messy theoretical landscape is helpful and insightful, and the arguments she presents for her views and against the different alternatives are at least always worth taking seriously. I wholeheartedly recommend the book to all those interested in this core philosophical issue... anybody interested in these issues should carefully study the arguments and proposals in this excellent work, which I expect to have a great impact in the field. Manuel Garcia-Carpintero, Mind Borg presents her readers with a thoroughly scholarly text. She cites just about everybody who plays her kind of game. In these citings, she gives fair and comprehensive representations of what others say about these matters and does so, generally, in a clear writing style. Nick Fotion, Analysis Borg brings order and focus to the debate, responding to a deluge of objections from multiple perspectives...Borg writes in an exceptionally clear and often witty style. Pursuing Meaning is lively, full of interesting turns of phrase, and detailed in content...Borg addresses questions about the usefulness and underlying plausibility of minimalism head-on, offering positive reasons for being a minimalist...Pursuing Meaning has a proactive rather than reactive tone, which helps draw along readers who are initially disinclined to support her position. Given the depth of disagreement over the semantics/pragmatics divide, that, in itself, is a major achievement. Allyson Mount, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews


Pursuing Meaning is a must-read for philosophers of language and a very clear guide to the current state of semantics for those interested in the field. The Philosophical Quarterly The book is very clearly written and structured, and it is informed not just by the philosophical debate, but also by developments in linguistics and cognitive science. In addition, Borg's configuration of a very messy theoretical landscape is helpful and insightful, and the arguments she presents for her views and against the different alternatives are at least always worth taking seriously. I wholeheartedly recommend the book to all those interested in this core philosophical issue... anybody interested in these issues should carefully study the arguments and proposals in this excellent work, which I expect to have a great impact in the field. Manuel Garcia-Carpintero, Mind Borg presents her readers with a thoroughly scholarly text. She cites just about everybody who plays her kind of game. In these citings, she gives fair and comprehensive representations of what others say about these matters and does so, generally, in a clear writing style. Nick Fotion, Analysis Borg brings order and focus to the debate, responding to a deluge of objections from multiple perspectives...Borg writes in an exceptionally clear and often witty style. Pursuing Meaning is lively, full of interesting turns of phrase, and detailed in content...Borg addresses questions about the usefulness and underlying plausibility of minimalism head-on, offering positive reasons for being a minimalist...Pursuing Meaning has a proactive rather than reactive tone, which helps draw along readers who are initially disinclined to support her position. Given the depth of disagreement over the semantics/pragmatics divide, that, in itself, is a major achievement. Allyson Mount, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews


`Pursuing Meaning is a must-read for philosophers of language and a very clear guide to the current state of semantics for those interested in the field.' The Philosophical Quarterly `The book is very clearly written and structured, and it is informed not just by the philosophical debate, but also by developments in linguistics and cognitive science. In addition, Borg's configuration of a very messy theoretical landscape is helpful and insightful, and the arguments she presents for her views and against the different alternatives are at least always worth taking seriously. I wholeheartedly recommend the book to all those interested in this core philosophical issue. . . anybody interested in these issues should carefully study the arguments and proposals in this excellent work, which I expect to have a great impact in the field.' Manuel García-Carpintero, Mind `Borg presents her readers with a thoroughly scholarly text. She cites just about everybody who plays her kind of game. In these citings, she gives fair and comprehensive representations of what others say about these matters and does so, generally, in a clear writing style.' Nick Fotion, Analysis `Borg brings order and focus to the debate, responding to a deluge of objections from multiple perspectives. . .Borg writes in an exceptionally clear and often witty style. Pursuing Meaning is lively, full of interesting turns of phrase, and detailed in content. . .Borg addresses questions about the usefulness and underlying plausibility of minimalism head-on, offering positive reasons for being a minimalist. . .Pursuing Meaning has a proactive rather than reactive tone, which helps draw along readers who are initially disinclined to support her position. Given the depth of disagreement over the semantics/pragmatics divide, that, in itself, is a major achievement.' Allyson Mount, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews


Author Information

Emma Borg joined the Philosophy Department at the University of Reading in 1998, shortly before she completed her PhD at University College London. She has been with the Department ever since and is currently Head of Department. She has held visiting positions at Rutgers University and the University of Chicago, and was a recipient of a Philip Leverhulme Prize (for 'outstanding young researchers'). She is on the editorial boards for the journals Ratio, Theoria, and the International Review of Pragmatics, and has published widely on issues within the philosophy of language, including the monograph Minimal Semantics (OUP, 2004).

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