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Sunday, February 22, 2015

Donnellanian Implicature

Speranza

Keith Sedgwick Donnellan is one of the major figures in 20th- and 21st-century philosophy of language and mind, a key member of the highly influential group that altered the course of philosophy of language and mind around 1970.

An innovative philosopher, Keith Sedgwick Donnellan's primary contributions were published in essay form rather than books.

This volume presents a highly focused collection of articles by Keith Sedgwick Donnellan, beginning with his 1966 groundbreaking "Reference and Definite Descriptions," historically the first move in the direct-reference direction.
Grice would credit the referential-attributive distinction, but would re-label it 'identificatory/non-identificatory' distinction, and was not wholly sympathetic towards the conclusions which Donnellan derived from the existence of the distinction.

(Grice visited Sage, Cornell, while Donnellan was teaching logic -- using textbooks by Quine ("Methods of Logic") and Strawson ("Introduction to Logical Theory").

Donnellan's theory may be seen as a development and critique of Strawson's "On referring".
In the late sixties and early 1970's, the philosophy of language and mind went through a paradigm shift, with the then-dominant Fregean theory being questioned by what has come to be known as "the direct reference turn."

Keith Sedgwick Donnellan played a key role in this shift, focusing on the relation of reference -- a touchstone in the philosophy of language --and the relation of "thinking about" -- a key idea in philosophical psychology.

The debates about the metaphysical and epistemological foundations of direct reference ended up forming the agendas of the philosophies of language (pragmatics) and philosophical psychology.

Donnellan's ideas are the heart of such ongoing debates.

This volume, which collects his key contributions dating from the late 1960's through the early 1980's alongside an introduction by one of the editors, Joseph Almog, disseminates the work to a new audience and for posterity.

This collection will be of interest to philosophers of language and mind, and of contemporary metaphysics and epistemology, as well as of linguistics and cognitive psychology.

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