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41. Philosophy of Management: Volume > 7 > Issue: 1
Paul Blackledge Review: Ethics and Politics: Selected Essays, Volume 2
42. Philosophy of Management: Volume > 7 > Issue: 1
Geoff Moore Review: Dependent Rational Animals
43. Philosophy of Management: Volume > 7 > Issue: 1
Ron Beadle Review: Tradition, Rationality and Virtue. The Thought of Alasdair MacIntyre
44. ProtoSociology: Volume > 1
Dirk Martin Die Wissenschaft der Gesellschaft
45. ProtoSociology: Volume > 1
Thomas M. Schmidt Nachmetaphysisches Denken
46. ProtoSociology: Volume > 1
Georg Peter Solidarität oder Objektivität
47. ProtoSociology: Volume > 1
Gerhard Preyer Kritik und Wissenschaftsgeschichte
48. ProtoSociology: Volume > 1
Wolf-Jürgen Cramm Ursprünge der analytischen Philosophie
49. ProtoSociology: Volume > 25
Nikola Kompa Review: Stephen Schiffer, The Things We Mean
50. ProtoSociology: Volume > 3
Dieter Mans Praktische Argumentationstheorie
51. ProtoSociology: Volume > 3
Frank Siebelt The many faces of realism
52. ProtoSociology: Volume > 3
Barbara Brüning Konstruktive Fragelogik
53. ProtoSociology: Volume > 3
Konrad Ott Erklären und Verstehen
54. ProtoSociology: Volume > 3
Christoph Fehige Moralisches Denken
55. ProtoSociology: Volume > 3
Bernhard Miebach Parsons/Pareto/Habermas
56. ProtoSociology: Volume > 3
Gerhard Antos, Josef Schu Elementare Dialogstrukturen
57. ProtoSociology: Volume > 31
William B. Starr Mood, Force and Truth
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There is a big difference between saying Maya is singing, Is Maya singing? and Sing Maya! This paper examines and criticizes two attempts to rigorously explain this difference: Searle’s speech act theory and the truth-conditional reductionism advocated by Davidson and Lewis. On the speech act analysis, each utterance contains a marker which says what kind of speech act the utterance counts as performing. The truth-conditional reductionists try to reanalyze the non-declaratives (Is Maya singing? and Sing Maya!) as complex declarative forms. The former analysis fails to recognize the indirect relationship between sentence (or clause) type and utterance force. The latter analysis fails to recognize the distinctive and thoroughly compositional contribution that the imperative, interrogative and declarative mood make to sentences containing them.
58. ProtoSociology: Volume > 4
Georg Peter Kosmopolis
59. ProtoSociology: Volume > 4
Erwin Rogier Die Identität von Körper und Geist, Übersetzung und Nachwort von Andreas Kemmerling
60. ProtoSociology: Volume > 4
Dirk Weinreich Recht, Staat, Freiheit - Studien zur Rechtsphilosophie, Staatstheorie und Verfassungsgeschichte