Mind, Volume 81Oxford University Press, 1972 A journal of philosophy covering epistemology, metaphysics, philosophy of language, philosophy of logic, and philosophy of mind. |
No interior do livro
Resultados 1-3 de 67
Página 133
... behaviour while in the other we report an incident in her behaviour " ( p . 173 ) . One should also recall the behavioural specification required in making the term " M " useful . ) Given these suppositions , it is impossible for all ...
... behaviour while in the other we report an incident in her behaviour " ( p . 173 ) . One should also recall the behavioural specification required in making the term " M " useful . ) Given these suppositions , it is impossible for all ...
Página 461
... behaviour , and yet they also enable subsequent behaviour to be specified as a parking offence . This specification introduces just the sort of further consequences that Searle ( p . 36 ) singles out as a common feature of those ...
... behaviour , and yet they also enable subsequent behaviour to be specified as a parking offence . This specification introduces just the sort of further consequences that Searle ( p . 36 ) singles out as a common feature of those ...
Página 463
... behaviour , and yet they also enable subsequent behaviour to be specified as a parking offence . This specification introduces just the sort of " further consequences that Searle ( p . 36 ) singles out as a common feature of those ...
... behaviour , and yet they also enable subsequent behaviour to be specified as a parking offence . This specification introduces just the sort of " further consequences that Searle ( p . 36 ) singles out as a common feature of those ...
Outras edições - Ver tudo
Palavras e frases frequentes
accept action analysis answer argue argument Argument from Illusion assertion assumption Austin behaviour belief Bounds of Sense called claim concept conclusion consequence context definition denial deny describe Descriptivism discussion distinction entails evaluative evidence example existence experience explanation expression fact falsity follows function G. E. M. Anscombe given Hare human illocutionary acts illocutionary force imperative imperative logic implies inference intelligible interpretation involved judgement Kant Kant's kind king of France language linguistic logical London looks material implication means mind moral notion object oblique intention particular perceive person philosophical point of view possible predicate premisses principle problem properties proposition psychological purpose question R. M. Hare reason reference relation relevant sceptic scientific Searle seems sensation sense sentence someone standard statement Strawson suppose theory thesis thing true or false truth truth functionally truth-functional understand University Press utterance valid verb Wittgenstein words