The Philosophy of LanguageJohn R. Searle Contains an introductory essay by the editor on the ten contemporary articles selected and on the questions which they raise. |
Contents
INTRODUCTION | 1 |
PERFORMATIVECONSTATIVE | 13 |
INTENTION AND CONVENTION IN SPEECH ACTS | 23 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
analysis analytic Aspects assigned audience Austin base phrase-markers Chomsky concepts constitutive conventional correlation deep structure define definiens definition discussion distinction effect empirical example explication explicit expression fact formulation function-indicating device further grammar grammatical relations Grice's hairy-coated thing hearer human hypothesis illocutionary act illocutionary force innate ideas innateness hypothesis John John's children knows the route labelled bracketing language-acquisition lexical items lexical readings linguistic description linguistic theory logical form natural languages notion object overt intention P. F. Strawson particular performative utterance philosophical problems philosophy of language phonetic phonological phrase phrase-structure procedure promise proposition question reference semantic categories semantic component semantic interpretation semantic markers semantic theory sense sense and reference sentence shaggy speaker specification speech act statement Strawson superficial phrase-marker suppose surface structure syntactic component Syntactic Structures T-marker Theory of Syntax timeless meaning tion transformational grammar transformations underlying phrase-markers utter H-W utterance-type verb words