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Victor Dudman's Grammar and Semantics [Hardback]

  • Formāts: Hardback, 158 pages, height x width: 216x140 mm, weight: 349 g, XI, 158 p., 1 Hardback
  • Izdošanas datums: 29-Oct-2012
  • Izdevniecība: Palgrave Macmillan
  • ISBN-10: 1137029242
  • ISBN-13: 9781137029249
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 158 pages, height x width: 216x140 mm, weight: 349 g, XI, 158 p., 1 Hardback
  • Izdošanas datums: 29-Oct-2012
  • Izdevniecība: Palgrave Macmillan
  • ISBN-10: 1137029242
  • ISBN-13: 9781137029249
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Over half a century ago, J. L. Austin predicted developments in the discipline of grammar which, in properly establishing it as a science, would at the same time displace a large part of philosophy - philosophical logic, to be specific. With the boundary finally removed between what philosophers then called 'logical syntax' (essentially logical form) and what grammarians study as syntax, Austin believed that 'we shall have rid ourselves of one more part of philosophy …. in the only way we ever can get rid of philosophy, by kicking it upstairs'. It was a radical, almost heretical, vision - the study of logic, one of the original and fundamental planks of philosophy, subsumed under the science of grammar. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Victor Dudman developed an English grammar of the kind Austin had predicted.

His work impressed many, but was ultimately misunderstood. Jean Curthoys' introduction explores the philosophical issues involved in those misunderstandings. Dudman's later, unfinished, but conceptually most complete, work is the second part of this book.
Preface ix
Acknowledgements xi
Part I Kicking Philosophy Upstairs: An Introduction to Vic Dudman's Code-Breaking Grammar
1(66)
Jean Curthoys
Introduction
3(8)
Section one grammar
11(44)
The puzzle
11(1)
The semantics of the tense inflection: question or (presumed) answer?
12(1)
Confusions and contradictions in received accounts of tense
13(3)
The `spontaneous' conception of meaning
16(4)
Code-breaking grammar and the puzzle of English tense
20(4)
The puzzle of English tense restated
24(3)
The first breakthrough
27(5)
The practicals: the third important grammatico-semantic category of English
32(2)
Digression on judgements
34(10)
Very brief philosophical interlude
44(1)
Tense in judgements
45(3)
The solution
48(6)
Conclusion
54(1)
Section two Philosophy - `there will still be plenty left'
55(12)
Frege's `third realm' and his conception of logic
57(3)
The primacy of inference
60(1)
Tensions in Frege's account of the judgement stroke
61(1)
English tense and the judgement stroke
62(3)
Material implication
65(1)
Conclusion
66(1)
Notes 67
JEAN CURTHOYS taught Philosophy at Sydney University, Australia, until her retirement. ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR V.H. DUDMAN taught Logic for many years at Macquarie University, Australia. In the earlier part of his career he was a Frege scholar and one of his translators. In his later years he worked on his own original English grammar and its application to problems in logic, most notably those concerning conditionals. He died in 2009.