Non-sentential assertions and the dependence thesis of word meaning

Mind and Language 14 (4):424–440 (1999)
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Abstract

To assert is to utter a sentence under certain conventions, claims Michael Dummett. This view runs afoul of empirical evidence indicating the widespread assertoric use of non‐elliptical words and phrases. Dummett also advances two theses apparently related to his sentence conventionalism: that word meaning depends on sentence meaning, and that language is (in some sense) prior to thought. I argue that these latter two theses are independent of the empirically dubious Sentential Thesis. Plausibly, the wider Dummettian logico‐metaphysical programme is not impugned by the existence of non‐sentential assertions.

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Tim Kenyon
University of Waterloo

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