Acknowledgements ...vii
Abbreviations ...viii
Introduction...1
1 The Basic Characteristics of Language: Signification and
Supposition...12
1.1 Introduction...12
1.2 Signification and Supposition of Terms: First
Approximation...14
1.3 Absolute vs. Connotative Terms...21
1.4 The Narrow and the Wider Sense of ‘Signify’
(significare)...24
1.5 The Property of Supposition ...37
1.5.1 The ‘Standard’ Case: (Personal) Supposition and the Truth and
Falsity of Affirmative Propositions ...47
1.5.2 Personal Supposition of Terms and ‘Taking a Term
Significatively’ (Sumi Significative) ...55
1.5.3 Improper Use and Improper Supposition ...64
1.5.4 Simple and Material Supposition ...70
1.6 Summary ...78
2 Ockham’s Semantic Model: Subordination, Correspondence, and the
Role of Mental Speech with Respect to Spoken Language ...80
2.1 Introduction ...80
2.2 Signification in Relation to Subordination and Imposition
...82
2.3 Conventional Signification and Equivocation ...93
2.4 Mental Propositions and Spoken Propositions: The Relation of
Correspondence...102
2.4.1 The General Explanation of ‘Truth’ and ‘Falsity’...111
2.4.2 Correspondence: Synonymy Again...123
2.4.3 Correspondence: Equivocation Again...129
2.5 Demonstratives, Correspondence, and Supposition of Mental
Terms...134
2.6 Summary...143
3 Ockham’s Model of Thought...146
3.1 Introduction...146
3.2 How to Acquire an Absolute Simple Concept...152
3.2.1 The Three Steps of Concept Acquisition...155
3.2.2 Some Objections...171
3.3 Ockham’s Model of Non-Propositional and Propositional
Acts...174
3.3.1 Propositional Acts of Apprehension: Mental
Propositions...178
3.3.2 Propositional Acts of Apprehension: Spoken
Propositions...185
3.3.3 Acts of Judgement...190
3.3.3.1 The First Kind of Assent...194
3.3.3.2 The Second Kind of Assent...199
3.4 Intuitive Cognition and Evident Judgement...203
3.4.1 General Propositions and Evident Judgement: propositiones per
se notae...215
3.5 Summary...228
4 Why Ockham Is Not Fodor...231
4.1 Behaviourism vs. Cognitive Science...233
4.2 Fodor on Language Acquisition...236
4.3 Fodor’s Language of Thought (lot)...240
4.4 Fodor on Mental States and Acts...242
4.5 Why Ockham Is Not Fodor (Summary)...249
5 Conclusion...251
Literature...257
Index...264
Sonja Schierbaum, Ph.D. (2012), University of Hamburg, is a postdoctoral researcher at the Humboldt-University, Berlin. She has published several articles in journals such as Vivarium. She co- authored a volume on the medieval conception of self-knowledge with Dominik Perler.
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