Intro; Series Editor's Foreword; Contents; Notes on Contributors; List of Figures; 1 Introduction; References; Part I Language and Communication; 2 Natural Meaning and the Foundations of Human Communication: A Comparison Between Marty and Grice; 1 Marty, Grice, and the Contrast Between Natural and Non-natural Meaning; 2 The Natural Foundations of Non-natural Meaning; 3 Back to Salome; References; 3 How a Statement Has Meaning by Expressing a Judgement-Brentano Versus Marty on Utterance Meaning; 1 Introduction; 2 The Right Kind of Meaning; 3 Non-natural Meaning Without Communicative Intentions
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3.3 Determination and Modification: Uses vs. Phrases3.4 Determination and Modification: Philosophical Applications; 4 Modifying Adjectives as Meanings Shifters; 5 On the Pros and Cons of the Meaning Shift Proposal; 5.1 Why Believe the Proposal?; 5.2 Against the Meaning Shift Proposal; 6 Two Variations of the Meaning Shift Proposal; 6.1 First Variation: Expression Types and Tokens; 6.2 Second Variation: Subtraction and Addition; 7 Modifying Adjectives and Modes of Combination; 8 Coda and Conclusion; References; Part II Ontology and Consciousness of Space and Time
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4 Brentano and Marty on Judgement and Utterance Meaning5 Reconsidering the Distinction Between Natural and Non-natural Meaning; 6 The Spoiler; 7 Non-communicative Intentions to the Rescue?; 8 Commitment to the Fore; 9 Utterance Meaning and the Identity Thesis; 10 What About Lying?; 11 Commitment Generalized; 12 Conclusion; References; 4 Determining and Modifying Attributes; 1 Introduction; 2 Adjectives-A Primer; 3 Determination and Modification; 3.1 Determination, Modification, and the Contemporary Distinctions of Adjectives; 3.2 Determination and Modification: The Scope of the Distinction
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4 Marty, Husserl and a Contemporary Translation5 Space for Naïve Realism?; 6 Awareness Versus Correlation; 7 'Raum' and Room; References; 7 Experiencing Change: Extensionalism, Retentionalism, and Marty's Hybrid Account; 1 An Extensionalist Account; 2 A Retentionalist Account; 3 Marty's Hybrid Account; References; Part III Meta-metaphysics and Meta-philosophy; 8 A Syncretistic View of Existence and Marty's Relation to It; 1 Introduction; 2 Syncretism About Existence; 3 How Marty Situates Himself in This Debate; References
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5 A Presentation and Defense of Anton Marty's Conception of Space1 Some Introductory Words; 2 Marty's Container Conception of Space in Outline; 3 Marty's Container Conception of Space in Metaphysical Detail; 4 The Handedness Argument I: Kant; 5 The Handedness Argument II: Graham Nerlich; 6 The Handedness Argument III: The Relationists' Go-Up-One-Dimension Argument Refuted; 7 Some Concluding Words; References; 6 Raum and 'Room': Comments on Anton Marty on Space Perception; 1 Space and Place; 2 Kant and Brentano-Dimensions of a Critique; 3 Marty's Radical Conception
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SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
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This edited collection of eight original essays pursues the aim of bringing the spotlight back on Anton Marty. It does so by having leading figures in the contemporary debate confront themselves with Marty's most significative contributions, which span from philosophy of mind, philosophy of language and ontology to meta-metaphysics and meta-philosophy. The book is divided in three parts. The first part is dedicated to themes in philosophy of language, which were at the centre of Marty's philosophical thinking throughout his life. The second part focuses on the problem of the objectivity and phenomenology of time and space, upon which Marty was working in the final years of his life. The final part turns to Marty's meta-metaphysical and meta-philosophical considerations. The intended audience of this book are primarily scholars and students interested in the relevant contemporary debates, as well as scholars working on the Austrian tradition.