Full Description
This book provides beginners with a sense of the questions and methods that make up the philosophy of language. The first four chapters develop the idea that language is a system that allows us to exchange information with each other, and the second four chapters explore the idea that language is a tool we can use to perform actions, like promising, insulting, and socially positioning ourselves.
The first part of the book traces an arc connecting questions like:
What is language?
Where does meaning come from?
How do we use meanings to send messages to each other?
The second part of the book takes up questions like:
Does pornography silence women?
What is offensive about slurs?
What do we lose when languages go extinct?
With a glossary of key terms, questions for reflection, and suggestions for further reading, Philosophy of Language: The Basics is the place to start for anyone who is curious about how high the seas of language rise.
Contents
Acknowledgements Preface Part 1: Information Exchange 1. What is a language? 2. Semantics 3. Metasemantics 4. Pragmatics Part 2: Speech as Action 5. Speech act theory 6. Silencing, disabling, and distortion 7. Slurs 8. Linguistic diversity. Bibliography Index



