
Contents
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I. Realism and Extra-linguistic Entities I. Realism and Extra-linguistic Entities
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II. The Metaphysical Requirement, the Context Principle, and the Sentential Priority View II. The Metaphysical Requirement, the Context Principle, and the Sentential Priority View
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IIa. Identity and the Metaphysical Requirement IIa. Identity and the Metaphysical Requirement
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IIb. The Context Principle and the Sentential Priority View in Foundations IIb. The Context Principle and the Sentential Priority View in Foundations
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IIc. The Sentential Priority View and Basic Laws IIc. The Sentential Priority View and Basic Laws
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IId. §10 and the Significance of Identity Statements IId. §10 and the Significance of Identity Statements
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III. §§28–31 of Basic Laws III. §§28–31 of Basic Laws
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IIIa. §31 and Metatheory IIIa. §31 and Metatheory
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IIIb. The Inductive Proof Interpretation and §29 IIIb. The Inductive Proof Interpretation and §29
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IIIc. §§28–31 and the Circularity Puzzle IIIc. §§28–31 and the Circularity Puzzle
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IIId. The VR (value-range) Function-name IIId. The VR (value-range) Function-name
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IV. §10 of Basic Laws IV. §10 of Basic Laws
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IVa. §10 and the Standard Interpretation: Three Difficulties IVa. §10 and the Standard Interpretation: Three Difficulties
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IVb. Solving the Three Difficulties of §10 IVb. Solving the Three Difficulties of §10
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IVc. The Sentential Priority View, Realism, and Personal Epistemology IVc. The Sentential Priority View, Realism, and Personal Epistemology
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5 Reference, the Context Principle, and the Significance of Sentential Priority
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Published:December 2020
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Abstract
Several sections of Basic Laws (§§10, 28–31) appear to offer intrinsically metatheoretic and, indeed, proto-model theoretic proofs. These sections are also notoriously puzzling: the proofs seem obviously incorrect, and it is difficult to understand how Frege could have thought that they worked. In this chapter it is argued that the puzzles in question are artifacts of the Standard Interpretation. They result, in particular, from the assumption that a subsentential expression’s having Bedeutung amounts to its referring to an extra-linguistic entity. The solution to the apparent difficulties is to see that a version of Frege’s context principle—a sentential priority view—is operative even in his later works.
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