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Studies in Logic


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Meaning as a Set-theoretic Object

A Gentle Introduction to the Ideas Behind Formal Semantics Title Available

Jaroslav Peregrin

Any comprehensive account of natural language must involve an answer to the question: What is meaning? And prima facie, the answer may seem to be not too difficult: meaning is a thing that gets "expressed" by an expression. Troubles begin when we go on asking what kind of thing it is. And there may also be a question whether it is a thing at all.

Fifty years ago, a radical attempt to answer such questions was made by the founding fathers of what has since become known as formal (or model-theoretical) semantics (Montague, D. Lewis, Cresswell, ...). As for the kind of thing meaning is, they basically followed Frege in placing them in the "third realm", different from the realm of physical, spatio-temporal things and also from the realm of mental content. They, however, made use of the fact that since Frege's the realm has been thoroughly researched and mostly colonized by set theory. Therefore, formal semanticists took meaning to be a set.

This approach to semantics yielded a vast number of interesting results both concerning the logico- philosophical nature of meaning and concerning particular meanings of various natural language expressions. Yet the general contribution of formal semantics to our understanding of meaning still waits for a thorough evaluation. And this is something that Peregrin undertakes in this book. As the heyday of formal semantics is now long over, he can consider it with the benefit of hindsight; and with such detachment we can see things which have not been so clearly seen before.

June 2025

978-1-84890-491-0






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