Attitude Reports
Propositional attitude reports are sentences built around clause-embedding psychological verbs, like Kim believes that it's raining or Kim wants it to rain. These interact in many intricate ways with a wide variety of semantically relevant grammatical phenomena, and represent one of the most important topics at the interface of linguistics and philosophy, as their study provides insight into foundational questions about meaning. This book provides a bird's-eye overview of the grammar of propositional attitude reports, synthesizing the key facts, theories, and open problems in their analysis. Couched in the theoretical framework of generative grammar and compositional truth-conditional semantics, it places emphasis on points of intersection between propositional attitude reports and other important topics in semantic and syntactic theory. With discussion points, suggestions for further reading and a useful guide to symbols and conventions, it will be welcomed by students and researchers wishing to explore this fertile area of study.
- Critically summarizes and surveys the key concepts, questions, and literature associated with propositional attitude reports
- Bases the discussion within the theoretical framework of generative grammar and truth-conditional compositional semantics
- Includes a guide to logical symbols and notational conventions, discussion questions, suggestions for further reading, and a glossary of key terms and definitions
Product details
May 2021Adobe eBook Reader
9781108534413
0 pages
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Foundations
- Attitude Reports and Proper Names
- The de dicto/de re Ambiguity
- de se Attitude Reports
- Desire Reports and Beyond
- Other Topics
- Glossary
- Bibliography
- Index.