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  1. Language, Truth, and Logic.A. J. Ayer - 1936 - Philosophy 23 (85):173-176.
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  • Language, truth and logic.Alfred Jules Ayer - 1936 - London,: V. Gollancz.
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  • Ethical neo-expressivism.Dorit Bar-On & Matthew Chrisman - 2009 - In Russ Shafer-Landau (ed.), Oxford Studies in Metaethics: Volume 4. Oxford University Press. pp. 132-65.
    A standard way to explain the connection between ethical claims and motivation is to say that these claims express motivational attitudes. Unless this connection is taken to be merely a matter of contingent psychological regularity, it may seem that there are only two options for understanding it. We can either treat ethical claims as expressing propositions that one cannot believe without being at least somewhat motivated (subjectivism), or we can treat ethical claims as nonpropositional and as having their semantic content (...)
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  • Language, Truth and Logic.[author unknown] - 1936 - Mind 45 (179):355-364.
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  • Speaking My Mind: Expression and Self-Knowledge.Dorit Bar-On - 2004 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press UK.
    Dorit Bar-On develops and defends a novel view of avowals and self-knowledge. Drawing on resources from the philosophy of language, the theory of action, epistemology, and the philosophy of mind, she offers original and systematic answers to many long-standing questions concerning our ability to know our own minds. We are all very good at telling what states of mind we are in at a given moment. When it comes to our own present states of mind, what we say goes; an (...)
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  • Artistic expression goes green.Joseph G. Moore - 2010 - Acta Analytica 25 (1):89-103.
    The paper is a critical discussion of the rich and insightful final chapter of Mitchell Green’s Self-Expression . There, Green seeks to elucidate the compelling, but inchoate intuition that when we’re fully and most expertly expressing ourselves, we can ‘push out’ from within not just our inner representations, but also the ways that we feel. I question, first, whether this type of ‘qualitative expression’ is really distinct from the other expressive forms that Green explores, and also whether it’s genuinely ‘expressive’. (...)
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  • Language as thought and as communication.Wilfrid Sellars - 1969 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 29 (4):506-527.
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  • “Meaning” Reconstructed: Grice and the Naturalizing of Semantics.Dorit Bar-On - 1995 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 76 (2):83-116.
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  • Lionspeak: communication, expression, and meaning.Dorit Bar-On & Mitchell Green - 2010 - In James R. O'Shea & Eric M. Rubenstein (eds.), Self, Language, and World: Problems from Kant, Sellars, and Rosenberg. Ridgeview Publishing Co.. pp. 89--106.
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  • Expressing.William P. Alston - 1964 - In Max Black (ed.), Philosophy in America. Ithaca: Routledge. pp. 15--34.
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  • Ethical Neo-Expressivism.Dorit Bar-On & Matthew Chrisman - 2009 - Oxford Studies in Metaethics 4:133-166.
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