
Published online:
03 October 2011
Published in print:
25 March 1999
Online ISBN:
9780191679544
Print ISBN:
9780198237884
Contents
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7.1 Running Elements 7.1 Running Elements
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7.2 Pronouns, Anaphora, and Speakers' Thoughts 7.2 Pronouns, Anaphora, and Speakers' Thoughts
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7.3 The Pragmatic Theory of Anaphora 7.3 The Pragmatic Theory of Anaphora
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7.4 The First-Person Pronoun within Speech Reports 7.4 The First-Person Pronoun within Speech Reports
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The Paratactic Solution The Paratactic Solution
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The Anaphoric Solution The Anaphoric Solution
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Cite
Ganeri, Jonardon, 'Indexicality', Semantic Powers: Meaning and the Means of Knowing in Classical Indian
Philosophy (Oxford , 1999; online edn, Oxford Academic, 3 Oct. 2011), https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198237884.003.0007, accessed 11 May 2025.
Abstract
This chapter begins with a discussion of indexicals. An indexical expression is a term able to refer to different objects in different contexts. Standard examples include demonstratives (‘this’, ‘that’), spatial and temporal indexicals (‘here’, ‘now’), and the personal pronoun (‘I’, ‘you’). The treatment of indexicality within the realist theory of meaning is problematic, for if the meaning of a term is identified with its reference, an indexical expression will be ambiguous. It then discusses the pragmatic theory of anaphora and the first-person pronoun within speech reports.
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