Fixing Language
Title | Fixing Language PDF eBook |
Author | Herman Cappelen |
Publisher | Oxford University Press |
Pages | 276 |
Release | 2018-03-23 |
Genre | Philosophy |
ISBN | 0192546295 |
Herman Cappelen investigates ways in which language (and other representational devices) can be defective, and how they can be improved. In all parts of philosophy there are philosophers who criticize the concepts we have and propose ways to improve them. Once one notices this about philosophy, it's easy to see that revisionist projects occur in a range of other intellectual disciplines and in ordinary life. That fact gives rise to a cluster of questions: How does the process of conceptual amelioration work? What are the limits of revision? (How much revision is too much?) How does the process of revision fit into an overall theory of language and communication? Fixing Language aims to answer those questions. In so doing, it aims also to draw attention to a tradition in 20th- and 21st-century philosophy that isn't sufficiently recognized. There's a straight intellectual line from Frege and Carnap to a cluster of contemporary work that isn't typically seen as closely related: much work on gender and race, revisionism about truth, revisionism about moral language, and revisionism in metaphysics and philosophy of mind. These views all have common core commitments: revision is both possible and important. They also face common challenges about the methods, assumptions, and limits of revision.
Fixing English
Title | Fixing English PDF eBook |
Author | Anne Curzan |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Pages | 209 |
Release | 2014-05-08 |
Genre | Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | 1107020751 |
Anne Curzan presents a pioneering new definition of prescriptivism as a linguistic phenomenon.
Making AI Intelligible
Title | Making AI Intelligible PDF eBook |
Author | Herman Cappelen |
Publisher | Oxford University Press |
Pages | 184 |
Release | 2021 |
Genre | Philosophy |
ISBN | 0192894722 |
Can humans and artificial intelligences share concepts and communicate? One aim of Making AI Intelligible is to show that philosophical work on the metaphysics of meaning can help answer these questions. Cappelen and Dever use the externalist tradition in philosophy of to create models of how AIs and humans can understand each other. In doing so, they also show ways in which that philosophical tradition can be improved: our linguistic encounters with AIs revel that our theories of meaning have been excessively anthropocentric. The questions addressed in the book are not only theoretically interesting, but the answers have pressing practical implications. Many important decisions about human life are now influenced by AI. In giving that power to AI, we presuppose that AIs can track features of the world that we care about (e.g. creditworthiness, recidivism, cancer, and combatants.) If AIs can share our concepts, that will go some way towards justifying this reliance on AI. The book can be read as a proposal for how to take some first steps towards achieving interpretable AI. Making AI Intelligible is of interest to both philosophers of language and anyone who follows current events or interacts with AI systems. It illustrates how philosophy can help us understand and improve our interactions with AI.
Understanding Language Change
Title | Understanding Language Change PDF eBook |
Author | April M. S. McMahon |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Pages | 380 |
Release | 1994-03-17 |
Genre | Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | 9780521446655 |
This textbook analyses changes from every area of grammar and addresses recent developments in socio-historical linguistics.
Roads to Reference
Title | Roads to Reference PDF eBook |
Author | Mario Gómez-Torrente |
Publisher | Oxford University Press |
Pages | 312 |
Release | 2019-11-28 |
Genre | Philosophy |
ISBN | 019258524X |
How is it that words come to stand for the things they stand for? Is the thing that a word stands for - its reference - fully identified or described by conventions known to the users of the word? Or is there a more roundabout relation between the reference of a word and the conventions that determine or fix it? Do words like 'water', 'three', and 'red' refer to appropriate things, just as the word 'Aristotle' refers to Aristotle? If so, which things are these, and how do they come to be referred to by those words? In Roads to Reference, Mario Gómez-Torrente provides novel answers to these and other questions that have been of traditional interest in the theory of reference. The book introduces a number of cases of apparent indeterminacy of reference for proper names, demonstratives, and natural kind terms, which suggest that reference-fixing conventions for them adopt the form of lists of merely sufficient conditions for reference and reference failure. He then provides arguments for a new anti-descriptivist picture of those kinds of words, according to which the reference-fixing conventions for them do not describe their reference. This book also defends realist and objectivist accounts of the reference of ordinary natural kind nouns, numerals, and adjectives for sensible qualities. According to these accounts these words refer, respectively, to 'ordinary kinds', cardinality properties, and properties of membership in intervals of sensible dimensions, and these things are fixed in subtle ways by associated reference-fixing conventions.
Opening Minds
Title | Opening Minds PDF eBook |
Author | Peter Johnston |
Publisher | Taylor & Francis |
Pages | 161 |
Release | 2023-10-10 |
Genre | Education |
ISBN | 1003842194 |
Introducing a spelling test to a student by saying, 'Let' s see how many words you know,' is different from saying, 'Let's see how many words you know already.' It is only one word, but the already suggests that any words the child knows are ahead of expectation and, most important, that there is nothing permanent about what is known and not known. Peter Johnston Grounded in research, Opening Minds: Using Language to Change Livesshows how words can shape students' learning, their sense of self, and their social, emotional and moral development. Make no mistake: words have the power to open minds – or close them. Following up his groundbreaking book, Choice Words, author Peter Johnston continues to demonstrate how the things teachers say (and don't say) have surprising consequences for the literate lives of students. In this new book, Johnston shows how the words teachers choose can affect the worlds students inhabit in the classroom. He explains how to engage children with more productive talk and how to create classrooms that support students' intellectual development, as well as their development as human beings.
Language Change
Title | Language Change PDF eBook |
Author | Joan Bybee |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Pages | 311 |
Release | 2015-05-28 |
Genre | Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | 1107020166 |
This new introduction explores all aspects of language change, with an emphasis on the role of cognition and language use.