Skip to Content

2009 Course Handbook

PHIL281: Language and Logic

How is meaning possible? What constitutes the fact that a linguistic symbol means one thing rather than another? Can meaning be explained in naturalistic or scientific terms? What is the relationship between language and thought, between linguistic meaning and mental content? Questions such as these dominate philosophy of language, and this course provides an overview of the main themes in 20th century and contemporary philosophical theorising about language.

Topics covered include: Frege on sense and reference, Russell's theory of definite descriptions, logical positivism and the verification principle, Quine on the analytic/synthetic distinction and the indeterminacy of translation, Kripke's and Wittgenstein's meaning-scepticism, naturalistic theories of meaning, non-reductionism about meaning, Grice's theory of meaning, Davidson on Tarskian truth-theories and truth-conditional semantics.

Credit Points:4
Contact Hours:3
When Offered: D1 - Day; Offered in the first half-year
Staff Contact: Dr Albert Atkin
Prerequisites:

12cp or admission to GDipPhil

Corequisites:

NCCWs:

PHIL251, PHIL381

Unit Designations: Science
Assessed As: Graded
Offered By:

Department of Philosophy

Timetable Information

For unit timetable information please visit the Timetables@Macquarie Website.

Recent Updates

17 Oct 2008 - EDUC80P

Program title amended