
Contents
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1. The Problem 1. The Problem
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2. Background: The Transformation of Intention 2. Background: The Transformation of Intention
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3. Why “Expression”: Three Clues 3. Why “Expression”: Three Clues
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4. Expressions of Intention: The General and the Special Use 4. Expressions of Intention: The General and the Special Use
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5. “In Terms of Language” 5. “In Terms of Language”
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6. What Natural Indications Can’t Do: Contradiction, Commitment, Impugning the Facts 6. What Natural Indications Can’t Do: Contradiction, Commitment, Impugning the Facts
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7. Homage Revisited 7. Homage Revisited
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14 Anscombe on the Expression of Intention: An Exegesis
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Published:June 2017
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Abstract
This paper asks an interpretive question about the place of “expression of intention” in Anscombe’s opening presentation of three familiar employments of a concept of intention, commonly taken as distinguishing between (1) having or forming the intention to do something, (2) doing something intentionally, and (3) doing something with a certain intention. An initial project in philosophy of action is, then, determining which of these employments is primary and can be used to explain the others. Anscombe’s own first division, however, is not the having of an intention but the expression of intention, as when someone says, “I’m going for a walk.” The paper argues that attention to the role of expression is not a mere peculiarity of Anscombe’s, and that specifically verbal expression provides a way to see how radically different in orientation Anscombe’s conception of intentional action is from the “standard story” of action since Donald Davidson.
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