Research Catalog

Words without objects : semantics, ontology, and logic for non-singularity

Title
Words without objects : semantics, ontology, and logic for non-singularity / Henry Laycock.
Author
Laycock, Henry.
Publication
Oxford : Clarendon Press ; New York : Oxford University Press, 2006.

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TextUse in library P325 .L3135 2006Off-site

Details

Description
xvi, 202 pages : illustrations; 22 cm
Summary
"A picture of the world as chiefly one of discrete objects, distributed in space and time, has sometimes seemed compelling. It is however one of two main targets of Henry Laycock's book; for it is seriously incomplete. The picture, he argues, leaves no space for stuff like air and water. With discrete objects, we may always ask 'how many?', but with stuff the question has to be 'how much?' Within philosophy, stuff of certain basic kinds is central to the ancient pre-Socratic world-view; but it also constitutes the field of modern chemistry and is a major factor in ecology."--Jacket.
Subject
  • Semantics
  • Semantics (Philosophy)
  • Ontology
  • Object (Philosophy)
  • Substance (Philosophy)
  • semantics
  • ontology (metaphysics)
  • Ontology
  • Semantics
  • Materie
  • Metaphysik
  • Sprache
  • Ontologie
  • Singularetantum
  • Semantik
  • Singularität Philosophie
  • Logica
  • Ontologie (filosofie)
  • Semantiek
  • Logik
  • Semantik
  • Ontologi
  • Singularität <Philosophie>
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references (p. [190]-196) and index.
Contents
  • Introduction -- 1. A Proposed Semantical Solution to the So-called -- 'Problem of Mass Nouns' -- 1.0 Metaphysics without bodies -- 1.1 Metaphysics without physical objects -- 1.2 Persistence, things, and stuff -- 1.3 Unity, identity, and the semantic turn -- 1.4 A proposed semantical solution to the so-called 'problem of mass nouns' -- 1.5 Non-singular identities and definite non-count descriptions -- 1.6 Syntax, semantics, metaphysics: bridging the apparent gaps -- 1.7 Counting and measuring -- 1.8 Post mortem on 'mass nouns' -- 2. In Thrall to the Idea of The One -- 2.0 The supposed exhaustiveness of singular reference.
  • 2.1 'The many bundled as 'the one' -- 2.2 Plurality and two conceptions of group-talk -- 2.3 Two kinds of motivation for collections -- 2.4 Collective reference -- 2.5 Collective predication and 'the class as many' -- 2.6 Platonism: 'the class as many' as an object -- 2.7 Nominalism: 'the class as many' as no object -- 2.8 The variable of many values -- 2.9 Collections born again -- 3. Non-count Descriptions and Non-singularity -- 3.0 'The much' repackaged as 'the one' -- 3.1 Conditions of uniqueness -- 3.2 The Theory of Descriptions (yet again) defended -- 3.3 The mechanics of non-count descriptions -- 3.4 Non-distributive predication -- 4. Quantification and its Discontents -- 4.0 The classical model -- 4.1 Roadblocks to non-singularity; meaning and truth-conditions -- 4.2 Non-singular quantification: the distinct semantic powers of 'all' and 'some' -- 4.3 Generality and distribution en masse -- 4.4 The non-count cases -- 4.5 Variables, instances, and samples -- 5. The Ideal Language Project and the Non-discrete -- 5.0 Ideal languages -- 5.1 Conditions for transparency -- 5.2 Power versus clarity -- 5.3 Reference and material 'non-entities' -- 5.4 The realms of multiplicity and unity -- 5.5 Two kinds of plural sentences -- 5.6 Concrete and generic non-count sentences and their material basis -- 5.7 The reality of substances.
ISBN
  • 0199281718
  • 9780199281718
LCCN
  • 2006281532
  • 9780199281718
OCLC
  • ocm62796070
  • 62796070
  • SCSB-8812198
Owning Institutions
Princeton University Library