"..no one in recent decades has written a book of this magnitude about
the semantics of natural language. Certainly nothing available today
matches this volume in depth, precision, and coherence."
-- Zoltan Szabo, in The Philosophical
Review (January 1997)
Current textbooks in formal semantics are all versions of, or
introductions to, the same paradigm in semantic theory: Montague
Grammar. Knowledge of Meaning is based on different
assumptions and a different history. It provides the only
introduction to truth- theoretic semantics for natural languages,
fully integrating semantic theory into the modern Chomskyan program in
linguistic theory and connecting linguistic semantics to research
elsewhere in cognitive psychology and philosophy. As such, it better
fits into a modern graduate or undergraduate program in linguistics,
cognitive science, or philosophy. Furthermore, since the technical
tools it employs are much simpler to teach and to master,
Knowledge of Meaning can be taught by someone who is not
primarily a semanticist.
Linguistic semantics cannot be studied as a stand-alone subject but
only as part of cognitive psychology, the authors assert. It is the
study of a particular human cognitive competence governing the
meanings of words and phrases. Larson and Segal argue that speakers
have unconscious knowledge of the semantic rules of their language,
and they present concrete, empirically motivated proposals about a
formal theory of this competence based on the work of Alfred Tarski
and Donald Davidson. The theory is extended to a wide range of
constructions occurring in natural language, including predicates,
proper nouns, pronouns and demonstratives, quantifiers, definite
descriptions, anaphoric expressions, clausal complements, and
adverbs.
Knowledge of Meaning gives equal weight to philosophical,
empirical, and formal discussions. It addresses not only the
empirical issues of linguistic semantics but also its fundamental
conceptual questions, including the relation of truth to meaning and
the methodology of semantic theorizing. Numerous exercises are
included in the book.
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