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Fictional names and individual concepts [PDF]
AbstractThis paper defends a version of the realist view that fictional characters exist. It argues for an instance of abstract realist views, according to which fictional characters are roles, constituted by sets of properties. It is argued that fictional names denote individual concepts, functions from worlds to individuals.
Andreas Stokke, Stokke Andreas
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Empty Names, Fictional Names, Mythical Names
Nous, 2005John Stuart Mill (1843) thought that proper names denote individuals and do not connote attributes. Contemporary Millians agree, in spirit. We hold that the semantic content of a proper name is simply its referent. We also think that the semantic content of a declarative sentence is a Russellian structured proposition whose constituents are the ...
David Braun
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Fictional Names and Co-Identification
This paper provides an account of co-identification with fictional names, the way in which a fictional name can be used to talk about the same fictional character on disparate occasions. I develop a version of the view that fictional characters are roles constituted by sets of properties that is couched within a dynamic understanding of fictional ...
Andreas Stokke
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Fictional Names in Psychologistic Semantics [PDF]
Abstract Fictional names pose a difficult puzzle for semantics. How can we maintain that Frodo is a hobbit, while admitting that Frodo does not exist? To dissolve this paradox, I propose a way to formalize the interpretation of fiction as ‘prescriptions to imagine’ (Walton 1990) within a psychologistic semantic framework in the style of ...
Emar Maier
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The Semantics of Fictional Names
Pacific Philosophical Quarterly, 1997Abstract: In this paper we defend a direct reference theory of names. We maintain that the meaning of a name is its bearer. In the case of vacuous names, there is no bearer and they have no meaning. We develop a unified theory of names such that one theory applies to names whether they occur within or outside fiction.
Fred Adams, Gary Fuller, Robert Stecker
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Proper Names and their Fictional Uses
Australasian Journal of Philosophy, 2011Fictional names present unique challenges for semantic theories of proper names, challenges strong enough to warrant an account of names different from the standard treatment. The theory developed in this paper is motivated by a puzzle that depends on four assumptions: our intuitive assessment of the truth values of certain sentences, the most ...
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Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, 2006
Alan Berger defends a strictly Kripkean view of reference and referring, but puts an original and very useful twist on it by making anaphoric relations central to his own version. He begins by distinguishing two sorts of referring expression: the "F-type," whose reference-transmitting causal-historical chain goes back to a dubbing grounded in a ...
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Alan Berger defends a strictly Kripkean view of reference and referring, but puts an original and very useful twist on it by making anaphoric relations central to his own version. He begins by distinguishing two sorts of referring expression: the "F-type," whose reference-transmitting causal-historical chain goes back to a dubbing grounded in a ...
openaire +1 more source

