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引用次数: 4
摘要
Samia Hesni,波士顿大学哲学系,745 Commonwealth Avenue #516, Boston, MA 02215, USA。摘要一般句有时被描述为规范性的或描述性的。描述性泛型对事物做出一般化的描述:狗会叫,鸟会飞,甜甜圈有洞。规范泛型做一些更复杂的事情;他们似乎传达了事情应该是怎样的:男孩不要哭,孩子被看到而不被听到,朋友不要让朋友酒后驾车。后一组句子表达了说话者对谓词项与类项匹配的认可。萨拉-简·莱斯利提出了规范性泛型的语义观,认为主词在规范性阅读和描述性阅读之间是多义的。我认为这不可能是正确的,并展示了格里安的含意观如何能够适应日常的规范性泛型,而莱斯利的多义观却不能。我的论点的一个结果是对从双重特征概念中得出语义结论的怀疑。
Correspondence Samia Hesni, Department of Philosophy, Boston University, 745 Commonwealth Avenue #516, Boston, MA 02215, USA. Email: shesni@bu.edu Abstract Generic sentences are sometimes characterized as normative or descriptive. Descriptive generics make generalized claims about things: dogs bark, birds fly, doughnuts have holes. Normative generics do something more complicated; they seem to communicate how things should be: boys don't cry, children are seen and not heard, friends don't let friends drive drunk. The latter set of sentences express something like the speaker's endorsement that the predicated terms match up with the kind terms. Sarah-Jane Leslie posits a semantic view of normative generics on which the subject term is polysemous between a normative and a descriptive reading. I argue that this cannot be right, and show how a Gricean implicature view can accommodate everyday normative generics in a way that Leslie's polysemous view cannot. An upshot of my argument is skepticism about drawing semantic conclusions from dual character concepts.
期刊介绍:
Thought: A Journal of Philosophy is dedicated to the publication of short (of less than 4500 words), original, philosophical papers in the following areas: Logic, Philosophy of Maths, Philosophy of Mind, Epistemology, Philosophy of Language, Metaphysics, and Value Theory. All published papers will be analytic in style. We intend that readers of Thought will be exposed to the most central and significant issues and positions in contemporary philosophy that fall under its remit. We will publish only papers that exemplify the highest standard of clarity. Thought aims to give a response to all authors within eight weeks of submission. Thought employs a triple-blind review system: the author''s identity is not revealed to the editors and referees, and the referee''s identity is not revealed to the author. Every submitted paper is appraised by the Subject Editor of the relevant subject area. Papers that pass to the editors are read by at least two experts in the relevant subject area.