Abstract:
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This paper is driven by the idea that the contextualism-relativism debate regarding the semantics of value-attributions turns upon certain extra-semantic assumptions that are unwarranted. One is the assumption that the many-place predicate of truth, deployed by compositional semantics, cannot be directly appealed to in theorizing/nabout people's assessments of truth value, but must be supplemented (if not replaced) by a different truth-predicate, obtained through certain "postsemantic" principles./nAnother is the assumption that semantics assigns to sentences not only truth values (as a function of various parameters, such as contexts, worlds and times), but also semantic contents/n, and that what context-sensitive expressions contribute to content/nare certain contextually determined elements. My first aim in this paper will be to show how the two assumptions have shaped two ways of understanding the debatebetween contextualism and relativism, as regards value-attributions. My second aim/nwill be to show that both assumptions belong outside semantics, and are moreover questionable. |
Abstract:
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Partial funding from the following/nprojects: “Context, Content and Compositionality,” European Community’s Seventh Framework/nProgramme (FP7/2007–13), grant n° 229 441–CCC; “Perspectival Thoughts and Facts”/n(PETAF), EC-FP7/2007–13, grant n° 238 128; “Semantic Content and Context-Dependence,”/nMICINN, Spanish Government, grant n° CSD2009-0056. |