1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910796632503321

Titolo

Mind and language - on the philosophy of Anton Marty / / edited by Guillaume Fréchette and Hamid Taieb

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Berlin, [Germany] ; ; Boston, [Massachusetts] : , : De Gruyter, , 2017

©2017

ISBN

3-11-052978-5

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (374 pages)

Collana

Phenomenology & Mind, , 2198-2058 ; ; Volume 19

Disciplina

410.1

Soggetti

Linguistics - Philosophy

Philosophy, Austrian - 19th century

Philosophy, Austrian - 20th century

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references at the end of each chapters and index.

Nota di contenuto

Frontmatter -- Table of Contents -- Anton Marty: From Mind to Language -- Consciousness and Intentionality in Anton Marty’s Lecture on Descriptive Psychology -- Austro-German Transcendent Objects before Husserl -- Mental Similarity: Marty and the Pre-Brentanian Tradition -- Talking about Intentionality: Marty and the Language of ‘Ideal Similarity’ -- Abstraction and Similarity: Edition and Translation of the Correspondence between Marty and Cornelius -- The Origins of Emotivism, Expressivism and the Error Theory: Marty, Scheler, Russell, Ogden & Richards -- Marty on Abstraction -- Marty and Meinong on What Judgements Are About -- Marty against Meinong on Assumptions -- Consciousness of Judging: Katkov’s Critique of Marty’s State of Affairs and Brentano’s Description of Judgement -- Grice and Marty on Expression -- Marty’s ‘Psychological’ Semantics and Its Posterity: Internalism and Externalism -- Husserl, Marty, and the (Psycho)logical A Priori -- Grammaire générale and Grammatica speculativa: The Historical Roots of the Marty–Husserl Debate on General Grammar -- Anton Marty’s Heritage – From Philosophy to Linguistics: Dissemination and Theory Testing -- List of Contributors -- Register

Sommario/riassunto

Anton Marty (Schwyz, 1847–Prague, 1914) contributed significantly to some of the central themes of Austrian philosophy. This collection



contributes to assessing the specificity of his theses in relation with other Austrian philosophers. Although strongly inspired by his master, Franz Brentano, Marty developed his own theory of intentionality, understood as a sui generis relation of similarity. Moreover, he established a comprehensive philosophy of language, or "semasiology", based on descriptive psychology, and in which the utterer’s meaning plays a central role, anticipating Grice’s pragmatic semantics. The present volume, including sixteen articles by scholars in the field of the history of Austrian philosophy and in contemporary philosophy, aims at exposing some of Marty’s most important contributions in philosophy of mind and language, but also in other fields of research such as ontology and metaphysics. As archive material, the volume contains the edition of a correspondence between Marty and Hans Cornelius on similarity. This book will interest scholars in the fields of the history of philosophy in the 19th and 20th centuries, historians of phenomenology, and, more broadly, contemporary theoretical philosophers.