Logic List Mailing Archive

Proper Names

18-19 May 2015
Budapest, Hungary

Proper Names
Current Work in Linguistics and Philosophy of Language
Workshop at the Institute for Advanced Study, Central European University,
Budapest
May 18?19, 2015
http://ias.ceu.edu/node/43092

Organizers:
Craige Roberts, CEU/IAS, Hungary; Linguistics and Philosophy, The Ohio
State University, USA
Zsófia Zvolenszky, Philosophy, Eötvös University (ELTE), Hungary

Speakers:
David Braun, Philosophy, University at Buffalo, SUNY, USA
Delia Graff Fara, Philosophy, Princeton University, USA
Emar Maier, Linguistics and Philosophy, University of Groningen, Netherlands
Ora Matushansky, Linguistics, SFL (Université Paris VIII/CNRS), France;
Utrecht University/UiL OTS, Netherlands
Anders Schoubye, Philosophy, University of Edinburgh, UK
Zsófia Zvolenszky, Philosophy, Eötvös University (ELTE), Hungary

Discussants:
Hanoch Ben-Yami, Philosophy, Central European University, Hungary
Laura Delgado, Philosophy, University of Barcelona/LOGOS Spain
Hans-Martin Gärtner, Linguistics, Research Institute for Linguistics,
Hungary
Aidan Gray, Philosophy, University of Illinois Chicago Circle, USA
Julie Hunter, Philosophy, University of Toulouse III, France
Brendan Balcerak Jackson, Philosophy, Zukunftskolleg, University of
Konstanz, Germany
Robin Jeshion, Philosophy, University of Southern California, USA
Hans Kamp, Philosophy and Linguistics, Institute for Natural Language
Processing, University of Stuttgart, Germany
Karen Lewis, Philosophy, Barnard College, Columbia University, USA
Eliot Michaelson, Philosophy, King?s College, UK
Matthew Moss, Philosophy, Columbia University, USA
Joanna Odrowaz-Sypniewska, Philosophy, University of Warsaw, Poland
Hazel Pearson, Linguistics, Zentrum für Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft
Berlin, Germany
Jessica Pepp, Philosophy, University of Oslo, Center for the Study of Mind
in Nature, Norway
David Pitt, Philosophy, California State University at Los Angeles, USA
Brian Rabern, Philosophy, University of Edinburgh, UK
Craige Roberts, Linguistics, CEU/IAS, Hungary; The Ohio State University,
USA
Adam Sennet, Philosophy, University of California Davis, USA
Marian Zouhar, Philosophy, Institute of Philosophy at the Slovak Academy of
Sciences, Slovak Republic

Workshop description:
Some of the most interesting questions in philosophy and science are the
ones whose answers at first seem obvious: How do we know what exists? Why
does an apple fall from a tree instead of floating up? One of the central
questions in philosophy of language and linguistic semantics in the 20th
century was how we refer using proper names. It may seem obvious that a
name refers to the person who bears it through an accord in that
individual?s speech community, and that this referent is featured in the
semantic content of utterances involving the name. This simple answer is
reflected in Saul Kripke?s influential proposal dating from the 1970s. But
by itself it fails to account for observations about the full range of uses
of names. How can our theory cover names without referents, like Athena or
Bugs Bunny? And consider identity statements, in connection with which one
of the central figures in the early literature on proper names, Gottlob
Frege, remarked: ?Identity challenges reflection?. Since Hesperus and
Phosphorus both refer to the same planet, Venus, how can Hesperus is
Phosphorus mean something more than Hesperus is Hesperus? Closely related
is the question of how to account for problems of de re belief attribution
and denial: Thales didn?t believe that Hesperus was Phosphorus should not
be taken to attribute to Thales a failure to appreciate the law of
identity. And how are referential uses of names related to predicative
uses, as in There are ten Venuses in the directory? The challenge is to
capture the distinctive aspects of these various uses while still providing
a unified, overarching analysis of names, one which does justice to the
intuitively appealing, simple answer entertained above.

Contemporary work on these issues is being conducted by both linguists and
philosophers, and the nature of the topic and some of the recalcitrant
problems facing extant accounts call for their collaborative interaction.
Accordingly, our invited participants include scholars from both fields.
The workshop will consist of six extended sessions over two days, each led
by one of our invited speakers, with ample time for discussion and
interaction with the distinguished group of invited discussants. We have a
website where participants can share papers and links to other relevant
work, in preparation for our discussions.

Others with appropriate background are cordially invited to join us. Please
let us know by May 5th if you would like to attend, so we can plan
accordingly..

Schedule: Sessions are seminar style with discussion:

Monday, May 18th:
9:30 ? 10:00 coffee
10:00 ? 12:15 Session 1: Delia Graff Fara
12:15 ? 14:00 lunch
14:00 ? 16:15 Session 2: Ora Matushansky
16:15 ? 16:45 coffee
16:45 ? 19:00 Session 3: Anders Schoubye

Tuesday, May 19th:
9:30 ? 10:00 coffee
10:00 ? 12:15 Session 1: Zsófia Zvolenszky
12:15 ? 14:00 lunch
14:00 ? 16:15 Session 2: Emar Maier
16:15 ? 16:45 coffee
16:45 ? 19:00 Session 3: David Braun

There will be a post-workshop dinner for all participants on Tuesday
evening. There is no registration fee, but there will be a modest charge
for the final dinner.

To register, please fill out the registration form at:
http://ias.ceu.edu/node/43092

For further information, contact:
croberts@ling.osu.edu
zvolenszky@elte.hu

-- 

Zvolenszky Zsófia
Logika Tanszék, ELTE BTK Filozófia Intézet
Department of Logic, Institute of Philosophy, Eötvös University
(ELTE)http://phil.elte.hu/zvolenszky <http://fil.elte.hu/zvolenszky>