Mind, Volume 80Oxford University Press, 1971 A journal of philosophy covering epistemology, metaphysics, philosophy of language, philosophy of logic, and philosophy of mind. |
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Página 271
... distinction between phatic and rhetic acts that concerns us here it is the distinction between rhetic and illocutionary acts . This distinction depends on what breakdowns we are to call " illocutionary breakdowns " . II When Austin ...
... distinction between phatic and rhetic acts that concerns us here it is the distinction between rhetic and illocutionary acts . This distinction depends on what breakdowns we are to call " illocutionary breakdowns " . II When Austin ...
Página 275
... distinction between locutionary and illocutionary should rest . And this is the same as saying that the distinction is based on the difference between : ( 1 ) the ways an utterance can fail to be clear , whether with respect to sense ...
... distinction between locutionary and illocutionary should rest . And this is the same as saying that the distinction is based on the difference between : ( 1 ) the ways an utterance can fail to be clear , whether with respect to sense ...
Página 563
... distinction which is quite familiar to the contemporary moral philosopher : the distinction , with us at least since Aristotle , between the rightness of the act and the praiseworthiness of the agent . The act , it will be said , may be ...
... distinction which is quite familiar to the contemporary moral philosopher : the distinction , with us at least since Aristotle , between the rightness of the act and the praiseworthiness of the agent . The act , it will be said , may be ...
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accept action alternative antecedent apply argue argument assertion Austin avowed reason behaviour believe bound variables Cartesian dualism Cartesian mind Cartesian theorist causal chess claim concept condition consequent consider correct custom definition deny Descartes distinction doctrine dream entails ethics example exist experiences explain expression fact false gavagai given grammar Humean Husserl identity illative implication illocutionary illocutionary act illocutionary force inference interpretation involved justified kind knowledge linguistic logical logical behaviourism London material implication meaning meaningful Mind Association moral Natural Deduction necessary notion object ontology pain particular person phatic philosophers physical pleasure polio possible predicate predicate logic premiss presupposes principle problem proposition question rational refer relation rules of language Ryle seems sense sense-data sentence someone sort speak speaker statement Strawson suggest suppose theory thesis things true truth truth table truth-functional truth-value unity University utterance word