The University of Sheffield
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PHI201   Reference and Truth   (20 credits)

 
Year Running: 2016/2017
Credit level: F5

Description

This module is an introductory course in the Philosophy of Language. The overall focus of the course will be on the notion of meaning. The first part of the course will attempt to shed light on the notion of meaning by investigating different accounts of the meanings of some types of linguistic expressions, in particular names (for instance 'Nelson Mandela') and definite descriptions (for instance 'the inventor of the zip', 'the first minister of Scotland'). We will then look at an influential approach to understanding what it is for words to have meaning and for people to mean things by their words, one due to Paul Grice. And we will examine the role and understanding of conventions and how someone can say something and yet communicate something very different from its conventional meaning. We will also explore the phenomena of "implicature" where people can communicate more (or something different from) what they literally say.

 

Reading List


Please click here for reading list.
 

Teaching Methods

Delivery Type Hours
Independent 168.0
Lecture 22.0
Other 2.0
Seminar 8.0
 

Methods of assessment

Assessment Type Duration % of formal assessment Semester
Course Work 0.0 50 % S1
Exam 2.0 50 % S1
 

Teaching methods and assessment displayed on this page are indicative for 2023-24.