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The act‐type theory of propositions as a theory of what is said

The act‐type theory of propositions as a theory of what is said I propose a version of the act‐type theory of propositions, following Hanks and Soames. According to the theory, propositions are types of act of predication. The content of a sentence is the type of such act performed when that sentence is uttered. A consequence of this theory is that the structure of the content of a sentence will mirror the structure of that sentence. I defend this consequence of the theory from two important objections. I then argue that this theory is well motivated because it can be part of a theory of what is said. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Analytic Philosophy Wiley

The act‐type theory of propositions as a theory of what is said

Analytic Philosophy , Volume Early View – Jun 7, 2023

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References (81)

Publisher
Wiley
Copyright
© 2023 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
ISSN
2153-9596
eISSN
2153-960X
DOI
10.1111/phib.12309
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

I propose a version of the act‐type theory of propositions, following Hanks and Soames. According to the theory, propositions are types of act of predication. The content of a sentence is the type of such act performed when that sentence is uttered. A consequence of this theory is that the structure of the content of a sentence will mirror the structure of that sentence. I defend this consequence of the theory from two important objections. I then argue that this theory is well motivated because it can be part of a theory of what is said.

Journal

Analytic PhilosophyWiley

Published: Jun 7, 2023

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