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Mind, Meaning and Metaphysics
The Philosophy and Theory of Language of Anton Marty
herausgegeben von K. MulliganInhaltsverzeichnis
- Brentano and Marty on Content: A Synthesis suggested by Brentano.
- 1 Brentano’s Final View.
- 2 Attribution in Modo Recto and in Modo Obliquo.
- 3 Object and Content.
- 4 Other Intentional Attitudes.
- 5 Immanent Objects and Transcendent Objects.
- 6 Conclusion.
- Marty’s Philosophical Grammar.
- 1 Introduction.
- 2 The Descriptive Psychology of Meaning: Linguistic Functions.
- 3 Propositions Show What would be the Case were they True.
- 4 Vagueness.
- 5 Meaning Change, Inner Form and Universals.
- 6 Marty and Wittgenstein: Two Conceptions of Philosophical Grammar.
- Meaning and Expression: Marty and Grice on Intentional Semantics.
- 2 Philosophy of Language as a General Theory.
- 3 Natural and Non-Natural Meaning.
- 4 Primary and Secondary Intentions.
- 5 Auto-Semantic Language Devices.
- Marty on Form and Content in Language.
- 1 Inner Speech Form in some of Marty’s Early Works.
- 2 Logic, Grammar and Psychology.
- 3 Form and Content in Marty’s Later Works.
- 4 Some Fundamental Tenets of Universal Grammar.
- Why a Proper Name has a Meaning: Marty and Landgrebe vs. Kripke.
- 1 Preliminaries.
- 2 Kripke’s View.
- 3 The Question of the Semantic Status of Proper Names.
- 4 Meaning and Lexical Meaning.
- 5 Reference and Meaning in Marty.
- 6 Ambiguity and Vagueness.
- 7 Landgrebe’s Solution.
- 8 Conclusion.
- The Categorical and the Thetic Judgement Reconsidered.
- 1 Marty and Transformational Grammar.
- 2 Categorical and Thetic Judgements.
- 3 Reinterpreting the Categorical-Thetic Distinction.
- 4 Conclusion.
- Classical and Modern Work on Universals: The Philosophical Background and Marty’s Contribution.
- 1 Categories of Meaning vs. Categories of Expression.
- 2 Relativism and Colour.
- 3 Natural Non-Absolute Universals.
- Marty and Magnus on Colours.
- Brentano andMarty: An Inquiry into Being and Truth.
- 1 Aristotle and Brentano.
- 2 Existence and Reality.
- 3 Bases and Operations.
- 4 Collectives are Non-Real.
- 5 Relations are Non-Real.
- 6 Space is Non-Real.
- 7 States of Affairs are Non-Real.
- 8 On the Origins of our Concepts of Existence and Truth.
- 9 A Correspondence Theory of Intentionality.
- 10 The Ontology of Truth.
- 11 Wertverhalte or Value-Contents.
- 12 A Postscript on Martian Aesthetics.
- Marty on Grounded Relations.
- Marty on Time.
- 2 Tasks of a Philosophy of Time.
- 3 Marty on the Ontology of Time.
- 4 Marty on the Consciousness of Time.
- 5 Conclusion.
- Marty’s Theory of Space.
- 2 Marty’s Two Basic Metaphysical Theses.
- 3 A Sketch of Marty’s Argument.
- Judgement-Contents.
- 1 Preliminary Remark.
- 2 Conceptual Framework.
- 3 Marty’s Judgement-Contents.
- 4 Comments.
- 5 Final Remark.
- of Consciousness and States of Affairs: Daubert and Marty.
- 1 Phenomenologists and Brentanists.
- 2 Marty on Subjectless Sentences.
- 3 Daubert’s Discussion of Marty.
- 4 Shortcomings in Marty.
- 5 Marty’s Theory in Phenomenological Perspective.
- Marty and the Lvov-Warsaw School.
- Two Letters from Marty to Husserl.
- A Bibliography of Works by and on Anton Marty.
- 1 Works by Marty.
- 2 Works on Marty.
- Index of Names.
- Index of Subjects.