Mind, Volume 76Oxford University Press, 1967 A journal of philosophy covering epistemology, metaphysics, philosophy of language, philosophy of logic, and philosophy of mind. |
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Página 5
6 correct or are no names at all ( 429b / 430a ) . If , on the other hand , names are correct by convention , any word to be used as a name will be correct ( 385d - e ) . Thus , both cases , taken in their extreme sense , do not admit ...
6 correct or are no names at all ( 429b / 430a ) . If , on the other hand , names are correct by convention , any word to be used as a name will be correct ( 385d - e ) . Thus , both cases , taken in their extreme sense , do not admit ...
Página 7
... names = revealing objects for what they are ) which , at the end of Socrates ' own presentation of how to distinguish correct from incorrect names , testify that this distinction coincides with the one between true and false names ...
... names = revealing objects for what they are ) which , at the end of Socrates ' own presentation of how to distinguish correct from incorrect names , testify that this distinction coincides with the one between true and false names ...
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... name is found if the name reveals the object it names ; in the special case of basic predicates this revelation is called representation , because no other names are involved here . Indeed since , for this purpose of names , namely to ...
... name is found if the name reveals the object it names ; in the special case of basic predicates this revelation is called representation , because no other names are involved here . Indeed since , for this purpose of names , namely to ...
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accept action answer argued argument Aristotle Aristotle's assertion avow behaviour believe Berry paradox blame causal claim command concept conclusion condition confirmation connexive consider context conversational implicature correct Cyclops definition deontic logic discussion disjunctive entails evidence example existence explanation expression fact false flash of light follows Frege happens Hempel human imagination imperative imperative logic implicature implies inference integer kind language letter or burn linguistic logic London means mind modus ponens moral notion object obligation occur ordinary paradox particular perhaps person philosophy possible Post the letter predicate logic premisses principle probability problem proposition propositional calculus propositional logic qualia question R. M. HARE rational reference relation relevant Richard paradox rule rules of inference Russell's suggestion seems sense sentence Smart someone sort statement Suppose Theorem theory thesis things thought tion true truth truth-functional University Press utterance word