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Corey Washington [6]Corey Glenn Washington [1]Corey G. Washington [1]
  1. The identity theory of quotation.Corey Washington - 1992 - Journal of Philosophy 89 (11):582-605.
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    The Identity Theory of Quotation.Corey Washington - 1992 - Journal of Philosophy 89 (11):582.
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    Situating Semantics: Essays on the Philosophy of John Perry.Michael O'Rourke & Corey Washington (eds.) - 2005 - MIT Press.
    15 Situating Semantics: A Response John Perry Introduction I am very grateful to Michael O'Rourke and Corey Washington for envisaging and putting together ...
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  4. Situating Semantics : Essays on the Work of John Perry.Michael O'Rourke & Corey Washington (eds.) - 2007 - MIT Press.
  5.  31
    A logically transparent approach to discourse reporting.Corey Washington & John Biro - 2001 - Mind and Language 16 (2):146–172.
    In this essay we develop a theory of discourse reports. The theory provides a common set of structural and interpretive principles that together account for the truth conditions of direct, indirect and mixed reports. A distinguishing feature of our view is the assumption that the complement sentence of a report divides exclusively and exhaustively into regions that characterize the content of the reported utterance and regions that characterize the form of the utterance. This assumption implies that mixed reports do not (...)
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    A conflict between language and atomistic information.Corey G. Washington - 2002 - Minds and Machines 12 (3):397-421.
  7.  14
    Content Partialism and Davidson’s Dilemma.Corey Washington - 2002 - ProtoSociology 17:138-152.
    Hartry Field, Jerry Fodor and others differ with Donald Davidson over the question of how a theory of content should be structured. Field and Fodor maintain that a theory should begin by following the compositional structure of a sentence in reducing the semantic properties of complex expressions to the semantic properties of their simplest parts and complete the job by reducing the semantic properties of the parts to non-semantic ones. Davidson describes this approach as the ‘Building-Block method’ and maintains that (...)
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