Publikation: The Acquaintance Inference and Hybrid Expressivism
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Sentences containing predicates of personal taste (for example, ‘tasty’, ‘funny’) and aesthetic predicates (for example, ‘beautiful’) give rise to an acquaintance inference: They convey the information that speakers have first-hand experience with the object of predication, and that they can only be uttered appropriately if that is the case. This is surprisingly hard to explain. I will concentrate on aesthetic predicates, and firstly criticize previous attempts to explain the acquaintance phenomena. Second, I will suggest an explanation that rests on a speech act theoretical version of hybrid expressivism, according to which, in uttering ‘𝑋 is beautiful’ speakers perform two illocutionary acts simultaneously: an expressive and an assertive one. I will spell out this suggestion in detail and defend it against objections. Considering puzzles related to the acquaintance inference will lead to a new argument for a promising version of hybrid expressivism in meta-aesthetics.
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BRIESEN, Jochen, 2024. The Acquaintance Inference and Hybrid Expressivism. In: Australasian Journal of Philosophy. Taylor & Francis. ISSN 0004-8402. eISSN 1471-6828. Verfügbar unter: doi: 10.1080/00048402.2024.2379276BibTex
@article{Briesen2024-12-16Acqua-71853, year={2024}, doi={10.1080/00048402.2024.2379276}, title={The Acquaintance Inference and Hybrid Expressivism}, issn={0004-8402}, journal={Australasian Journal of Philosophy}, author={Briesen, Jochen} }
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