Philosophy Dictionary of Arguments

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 R. Chisholm - Philosophy Dictionary of Arguments
 
Intensions: intensions are reference objects resulting from a linguistic description, in contrast to the material objects (extensions) that may differ therefore, whether due to inaccuracies, or by the use of indexical expressions. Examples of intensions are “the oldest person in the room”, “the winner”, “John's favorite quote”, “the one who violates the speed limit”. See also morning star/evening star, extensionality, extension.
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Annotation: The above characterizations of concepts are neither definitions nor exhausting presentations of problems related to them. Instead, they are intended to give a short introduction to the contributions below. – Lexicon of Arguments.
 
Author Item    More concepts for author
Anscombe, G. E. M. Intensions   Anscombe
Brandom, Robert Intensions   Brandom
Carnap, Rudolf Intensions   Carnap
Chalmers, David Intensions   Chalmers
Chisholm, Roderick Intensions   Chisholm
Cresswell, Maxwell J. Intensions   Cresswell
Davidson, Donald Intensions   Davidson
Dennett, Daniel Intensions   Dennett
Dummett, Michael E. Intensions   Dummett
Frege, Gottlob Intensions   Frege
Geach, Peter Intensions   Geach
Jackson, Frank Intensions   Jackson
Leibniz, G.W. Intensions   Leibniz
Lewis, David K. Intensions   Lewis
Logic Texts Intensions   Logic Texts
Millikan, Ruth Intensions   Millikan
Putnam, Hilary Intensions   Putnam
Quine, W.V.O. Intensions   Quine
Stalnaker, Robert Intensions   Stalnaker
Stechow, Arnim von Intensions   Stechow
Wittgenstein, Ludwig Intensions   Wittgenstein

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