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Semantic Perception Jody Azzouni (Professor of Philosophy, Professor of Philosophy, Tufts University)

Semantic Perception By Jody Azzouni (Professor of Philosophy, Professor of Philosophy, Tufts University)

Summary

Humans involuntarily experience physical items as having meaning-properties. Semantic Perception explores this experience-the phenomenology of the understanding of language-in depth. Jody Azzouni shows the many ways that we experience the meaning-properties of language artifacts as independent of the intentions of their makers.

Semantic Perception Summary

Semantic Perception: How the Illusion of a Common Language Arises and Persists by Jody Azzouni (Professor of Philosophy, Professor of Philosophy, Tufts University)

Jody Azzouni argues that we involuntarily experience certain physical items, certain products of human actions, and certain human actions themselves as having meaning-properties. We understand these items as possessing meaning or as having (or being capable of having) truth values. For example, a sign on a door reading Drinks Inside strikes native English speakers as referring to liquids in the room behind the door. The sign has a truth value-if no drinks are found in the room, the sign is misleading. Someone pointing in a direction has the same effect: we experience her gesture as significant. Azzouni does not suggest that we don't recognize the expectations or intentions of speakers (including ourselves); we do recognize that the person pointing in a certain direction intends for us to understand her gesture's significance. Nevertheless, Azzouni asserts that we experience that gesture as having significance independent of her intentions. The gesture is meaningful on its own. The same is true of language, both spoken and written. We experience the meanings of language artifacts as independent of their makers' intentions in the same way that we experience an object's shape as a property independent of the object's color. There is a distinctive phenomenology to the experience of understanding language, and Semantic Perception shows how this phenomenology can be brought to bear as evidence for and against competing theories of language.

Semantic Perception Reviews

The book is well-structured, provides deep and detailed philosophical analysis, and covers a wide range of topics within philosophy of language and mind; it also presents clear and strong methodological views and implications for theorizing on semantics. * Marta Jorba, Mind *
I think Jody Azzouni is easily one of the best and most creative philosophers alive. Unsurprisingly, his [book] is a novel and excellent work of philosophy, which is very much at the cutting edge of the discipline. * John Collins, Professor of Philosophy, University of East Anglia *
One has the sense, reading this book, that it is the product of years of thinking hard about fundamental matters. There is a good deal of originality here, approaching well worked-over topics in new and promising ways. * Howard Wettstein, Professor of Philosophy, University of California, Riverside *

About Jody Azzouni (Professor of Philosophy, Professor of Philosophy, Tufts University)

Jody Azzouni is Professor of Philosophy at Tufts University. He is the author of Deflating Existential Consequence (OUP, 2004), Tracking Reason (OUP, 2006), and Talking about Nothing (OUP, 2010).

Table of Contents

FIRST METHODOLOGICAL INTERLUDE: SPECIAL SCIENCES AND EVIDENCE; SECOND METHODOLOGICAL INTERLUDE

Additional information

NLS9780190275549
9780190275549
0190275545
Semantic Perception: How the Illusion of a Common Language Arises and Persists by Jody Azzouni (Professor of Philosophy, Professor of Philosophy, Tufts University)
New
Paperback
Oxford University Press Inc
2015-11-26
386
N/A
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