
Contents
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1. Introduction: Thinking of Oneself as Oneself 1. Introduction: Thinking of Oneself as Oneself
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2. Centered Content in Assertion and Communication 2. Centered Content in Assertion and Communication
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2.1. Uncentering and Recentering 2.1. Uncentering and Recentering
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2.2. Sequence Relativizing 2.2. Sequence Relativizing
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2.2.1. Sequence Relativizing (1): Ninan’s and Torre’s Proposal 2.2.1. Sequence Relativizing (1): Ninan’s and Torre’s Proposal
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2.2.2. Sequence Relativizing (2): Stojanovic’s Proposal 2.2.2. Sequence Relativizing (2): Stojanovic’s Proposal
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3. De Se Phenomena in Language 3. De Se Phenomena in Language
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3.1. Asserting One’s Taste 3.1. Asserting One’s Taste
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3.2. Speaking about Oneself 3.2. Speaking about Oneself
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4. Conclusion 4. Conclusion
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Notes Notes
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References References
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22 De Se Assertion
Get accessIsidora Stojanovic is Research Director of the Department of Philosophy, Institut Jean Nicod.
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Published:11 December 2018
Cite
Abstract
De se attitudes, that is, attitudes that we have about ourselves in a first-personal way, have long been recognized as interestingly different from other attitudes. However, speech acts and, in particular, assertions that we make about ourselves have barely begun to draw philosophers’ attention. This chapter discusses some recent proposals that aim to bridge the gap between the significance of the de se phenomena in thought and the way that we express those attitudes in language. Section 1 provides some background on the de se and the essential indexical. Section 2 surveys proposals that make use of centered contents in modeling assertion and communication. Section 3 discusses the main motivations for the idea that centered contents are not only the contents of de se attitudes but also of the corresponding assertions.
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