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10 - On Speaking Thus: The Semantics of Indirect Discourse

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 December 2009

Jane Heal
Affiliation:
St John's College, Cambridge
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Summary

INTRODUCTION

This essay applies to the elucidation of indirect discourse an idea which has already been defended elsewhere: that of indexical predication (see Essay 9). The resulting view has, I suggest, the advantages of Davidson's proposal in “On Saying That” without its disadvantages (Davidson 1984: essay 7, first published 1968). Indeed, if Davidson had revised this earlier proposal about indirect speech in the light of the ideas sketched in “Quotation”, the upshot would resemble what is suggested here (Davidson 1984: essay 6, first published 1979; Rumfitt 1993: 431–432). Davidson's earlier proposal is that the ‘that’ of indirect discourse refers indexically to the particular utterance which follows it. The alternative view to be defended here is that a that-clause refers indexically to some non-particular item of which the particular utterance is an instance.

The essay, however, does not focus on the nature and identity conditions of these non-particulars or on the project of providing some formal theory of indirect discourse, although it offers just a little on these topics in the final section. Rather, as the title suggests, the aim is to approach the study of reports of speech through the idea of indexical predication and thereby to situate indirect discourse in a wider context. Doing so brings out motivations for the general view which would still be operative even if some particular implementation is found unacceptable.

Section 2 summarises the main relevant ideas about indexical predication.

Type
Chapter
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Mind, Reason and Imagination
Selected Essays in Philosophy of Mind and Language
, pp. 174 - 195
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2003

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