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The volume honours Eva Picardi - her philosophical views and
interests, as well as her teaching - collecting eighteen essays,
some by former students of hers, some by colleagues with whom she
discussed and interacted. The themes of the volume encompass topics
ranging from foundational and historical issues in the philosophy
of language and the philosophy of logic and mathematics, as well as
issues related to the recent debates on rationality, naturalism and
the contextual aspects of meaning. The volume is split into three
sections: one on Gottlob Frege's work - in philosophy of language
and logic -, taking into account also its historical dimension; one
on Donald's Davidson's work; and one on the
contextualism-literalism dispute about meaning and on naturalist
research programmes such as Chomsky's.
The volume honours Eva Picardi - her philosophical views and
interests, as well as her teaching - collecting eighteen essays,
some by former students of hers, some by colleagues with whom she
discussed and interacted. The themes of the volume encompass topics
ranging from foundational and historical issues in the philosophy
of language and the philosophy of logic and mathematics, as well as
issues related to the recent debates on rationality, naturalism and
the contextual aspects of meaning. The volume is split into three
sections: one on Gottlob Frege's work - in philosophy of language
and logic -, taking into account also its historical dimension; one
on Donald's Davidson's work; and one on the
contextualism-literalism dispute about meaning and on naturalist
research programmes such as Chomsky's.
Vagueness is a familiar but deeply puzzling aspect of the relation
between language and the world. It is highly controversial what the
nature of vagueness is -- a feature of the way we represent reality
in language, or rather a feature of reality itself? May even
relations like identity or parthood be affected by vagueness?
Sorites arguments suggest that vague terms are either inconsistent
or have a sharp boundary. The account we give of such paradoxes
plays a pivotal role for our understanding of natural languages. If
our reasoning involves any vague concepts, is it safe from
contradiction? Do vague concepts really lack any sharp boundary? If
not, why are we reluctant to accept the existence of any sharp
boundary for them? And what rules of inference can we validly
apply, if we reason in vague terms? Cuts and Clouds presents the
latest work towards a clearer understanding of these old puzzles
about the nature and logic of vagueness. The collection offers a
stimulating series of original essays on these and related issues
by some of the world's leading experts.
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