Philosophy 262 - Meaning and Truth: The Semantics of Natural Language

MEANING AND TRUTH

Fall
2020
02
4.00
Theresa Helke
TTh 07:45-09:00
Smith College
50161-F20
REMOTE
thelke@smith.edu
This course is an introduction to central topics in the philosophy of language. What is the relation between thought, language and reality? What kinds of things do we do with words? Is there anything significant about the definite article “the”? How does meaning accrue to proper names? Is speaker meaning the same as the public, conventional (semantic) meaning of words? Is there a distinction between metaphorical and literal language? We explore some of the answers that philosophers like Frege, Russell, Strawson, Donnellan, Austin, Quine, Kripke and Davidson have offered to these and other related questions. Prerequisite: LOG 100, LOG 101 or the equivalent.
Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.