Semantic Under-determinacy and Conceptual Constraints (Towards a Proposal about Lexical Meaning)
Abstract
In this paper, I focus on some examples of semantic under-determinacy, which give rise to the view that language involves some kind of context-sensitivity.Jason Stanley and others have argued that such context-sensitivity could be traced to the terms’ syntax, or logical form. I offer an argument against this contention and defend a view in which context-sensitivity is traced to purely conceptual (semantic) constraints. I then explore the implications of this view on a conception of lexical meaning, urging that we should embrace a form of molecularism about the semantics of words.
Published
2013-12-28
How to Cite
Belleri, D. (2013) “Semantic Under-determinacy and Conceptual Constraints (Towards a Proposal about Lexical Meaning)”, Rivista Italiana di Filosofia del Linguaggio, 7(3), pp. 109-124. Available at: http://rifl.unical.it/index.php/rifl/article/view/179 (Accessed: 21November2024).
Section
VARIA
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