یادداشتهای مربوط به کتابنامه ، واژه نامه و نمایه های داخل اثر
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Includes bibliographical references and index.
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Cover; Title; Copyright; Dedication; Contents; Acknowledgments; Introduction: Inferentialism's Years of Travel and Its Logico-Philosophical Calling; Part I Language and Meaning; 1 Grounding Assertion and Acceptance in Mental Imagery; 2 Semantics: Why Rules Ought to Matter; 3 Quine Peregrinating: Norms, Dispositions, and Analyticity; 4 Let's Admit Defeat: Assertion, Denial, and Retraction; Part II Logic and Semantics; 5 Inferentialism, Structure, and Conservativeness; 6 From Logical Expressivism to Expressivist Logics: Sketch of a Program and Some Implementations.
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18 Inferentialism and the Reception of Testimony; List of Contributors; Index.
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7 Inferentialist-Expressivism for Explanatory Vocabulary; 8 Logical Expressivism and Logical Relations; 9 Propositional Contents and the Logical Space; 10 Assertion, Inference, and the Conditional; Part III Rules, Agency, and Explanation; 11 Naturecultural Inferentialism; 12 Inferentialism: Where Do We Go from Here?; 13 The Nature and Diversity of Rules; 14 Governed by Rules, or Subject to Rules?; Part IV History and Present; 15 Inferentialism after Kant; 16 Inferentialism, Naturalism, and the Ought-to-Bes of Perceptual Cognition; 17 Inferentialism and Its Mathematical Precursor.
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متن يادداشت
Inferentialism is a philosophical approach premised on the claim that an item of language (or thought) acquires meaning (or content) in virtue of being embedded in an intricate set of social practices normatively governed by inferential rules. Inferentialism found its paradigmatic formulation in Robert Brandom's landmark book Making it Explicit, and over the last two decades it has established itself as one of the leading research programs in the philosophy of language and the philosophy of logic. While Brandom's version of inferentialism has received wide attention in the philosophical literature, thinkers friendly to inferentialism have proposed and developed new lines of inquiry that merit wider recognition and critical appraisal. From Rules to Meaning brings together new essays that systematically develop, compare, assess and critically react to some of the most pertinent recent trends in inferentialism. The book's four thematic sections seek to apply inferentialism to a number of core issues, including the nature of meaning and content, reconstructing semantics, rule-oriented models and explanations of social practices and inferentialism's historical influence and dialogue with other philosophical traditions. With contributions from a number of distinguished philosophers-including Robert Brandom and Jaroslav Peregrin-this volume is a major contribution to the philosophical literature on the foundations of logic and language.