Stellenbosch Papers in Linguistics Plus (Nov 2018)

Speaker’s reference, semantic reference and public reference

  • Smit, J. P.

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5842/55-0-777
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 55, no. 0
pp. 133 – 143

Abstract

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Kripke (1977) views Donnellan’s (1966) misdescription cases as cases where semantic reference and speaker’s reference come apart. Such cases, however, are also cases where semantic reference conflicts with a distinct species of reference I call “public reference”, i.e. the object that the cues publicly available at the time of utterance indicate is the speaker’s referent of the utterance. This raises the question: do the misdescription cases trade on the distinction between semantic reference and speaker’s reference, or the distinction between semantic reference and public reference? I argue that Kripke’s own construal in terms of semantic reference and speaker’s reference is at best incomplete, and probably wrong. I also explain the general importance of the notion of ‘public reference’.

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