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  1. The things we mean.Stephen Schiffer - 2003 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Stephen Schiffer presents a groundbreaking account of meaning and belief, and shows how it can illuminate a range of crucial problems regarding language, mind, knowledge, and ontology. He introduces the new doctrine of 'pleonastic propositions' to explain what the things we mean and believe are. He discusses the relation between semantic and psychological facts, on the one hand, and physical facts, on the other; vagueness and indeterminacy; moral truth; conditionals; and the role of propositional content in information acquisition and explanation. (...)
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  • Pleonastic Explanations. [REVIEW]Mark Sainsbury - 2005 - Mind 114 (453):97-111.
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  • (2 other versions)Précis of the things we mean. [REVIEW]Stephen Schiffer - 2006 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 73 (1):208–210.
    In The Things We Mean I argue that there exist such things as the things we mean and believe, and that they are what I call pleonastic propositions. The first two chapters offer an initial motivation and articulation of the theory of pleonastic propositions, and of pleonastic entities generally. The remaining six chapters bring that theory to bear on issues in the theory of content: the existence and nature of meanings; knowledge of meaning; the meaning relation and compositional semantics; the (...)
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  • Madame Bovary è concreta come una donna o astratta come una legge?Carola Barbero - 2005 - Rivista di Estetica 45 (3).
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