Results 201 to 210 of about 4,426 (228)
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Semantic Externalism and Epistemic Illusions
2007Abstract Potential sources of false belief is a topic that is of some interest in epistemology. The topic is relevant to the theory of justified belief since, whatever else it is, justified belief is belief that is epistemically reasonable—where the relevant notion of reasonableness will have to do with the adequacy of the belief‘s ...
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Incorporating External Data Using Semantics
2013Representing environmental performance indicators (EPIs) is often based on the incorporation of external data from third parties, e.g. databases or applications. A challenge on its own is the heterogeneity of the used formats and the missing of agreed upon definitions. We propose a semantic approach for addressing these issues.
Siegfried Bublitz +6 more
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A semantic explanation for the External Argument Generalization
Morphology, 2016-Er nominals usually obey the External Argument Generalization: the argument of the nominal receives the thematic role that the verb assigns to its external argument. I argue that this syntactic generalization, as well as the exceptions to it, can be explained by semantics.
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Semantic Comprehension, Inference and Psychological Externalism
Mind & Language, 2013AbstractThe externalist examples of Burge, Putnam etc. were offered as examples of how it is physically identical twins can differ in mental states such as belief, and little attention was paid to the interpretations the twins impose on their respective acoustic inputs.
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Inferentialism and semantic externalism: a neglected debate between Sellars and Putnam
British Journal for the History of Philosophy, 2021Takaaki Matsui
exaly
Externalism and the Transcendental Situation of Semantics
2012The paper analyses the conditions of possibility of empirical investigation of meaning as a basis for a critique of semantic externalism. There are two basic ways of doing semantics: the denotational and the conceptualist way. Whatever the approach chosen, the sematicist cannot avoid assuming the omniscient position, seeing our words/concepts and ...
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