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Vague Language In the Medieval Recipes of the Forme of Cury
by Ruth Carroll
published in Peikola, Skaffari and Tanskanen (2009, John Benjamins).
more
http://www.benjamins.com/cgi-bin/t_bookview.cgi?bookid=P%26bns%20189
Although many modern readers find medieval recipes to be disturbingly vague, no study until now has gone beyond first impressions to investigate what exactly evokes this reaction. This quantitative study documents the vagueness and precision of the English medieval recipes found in the 'Forme of Cury' collection. It starts from Channell's (1994) tripartite typology of vagueness (Approximated Quantities, Vague Categories, and Placeholder Words), and finds that there is surprisingly little linguistic signaling of vagueness in medieval recipes. By considering three additional categories of vagueness (Flexibility, Superordinacy, and Omission), the paper then shows that much of the perceived vagueness of medieval recipes is due to Omission, which can be explained by the very different audience for which medieval recipes were written.
This paper was awarded the Sophie Coe Subsidiary Prize in Food History, 2009.
Vagueness and Power-Delegation in Law: A Reply to Sorensen
Forthcoming in M. Freeman & F. Smith (Eds.), Current Legal Issues: Law and Language (Oxford University Press)
Roy Sorensen has argued that vagueness in the law cannot be justified by appeal to the value of power-delegation, and... more Roy Sorensen has argued that vagueness in the law cannot be justified by appeal to the value of power-delegation, and thereby threatens to take away one of the main reasons for thinking that vagueness can be valuable to law. Delegation of power to officials is justified, he thinks, only if these officials are in a better position to discover whether a particular x is F, a condition not satisfied in cases of vagueness. I argue that Sorensen’s argument is unsound: delegation of power can be valuable even if the delegates are not in a better position to answer that question.
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Seen by:Vagueza na Tradução Radical
Trabalho de Graduação
Trabalho final da disciplina "Tradução Radical" ministrada pela profª. Araceli Veloso no curso de Graduação... more
Trabalho final da disciplina "Tradução Radical" ministrada pela profª. Araceli Veloso no curso de Graduação em Filosofia da UFG.
A intenção desse trabalho é falar sobre a Vagueza. A motivação surgiu a partir da leitura do capítulo dois do W&O de Quine, precisamente de um trecho da décima seção desse capítulo.
“A área de penumbra decorrente da vagueza de ‘Vermelho’ consiste em estimulações a respeito das quais os significados estimulativos de ´Vermelho” tendem a variar de falante para falante, de ocasião para ocasião; (...)”
O assunto principal desta seção não é exatamente a vagueza, mas sim as frases de observação. Antes de discorrer sobre a vagueza, devo fazer uma introdução à famosa discussão deste capítulo.
The Secret to Legal Foretelling: Generic and Inter-generic Aspects of Vagueness in Contracts, Patents and Regulations
Co-authored with Jan Engberg, published in 'International Journal of English Studies'
In this genre analysis research paper, we compare U.S. patents, contracts, and regulations on technical matters with a... more In this genre analysis research paper, we compare U.S. patents, contracts, and regulations on technical matters with a focus upon the relation between vagueness and communicative purposes and subpurposes of these three genres. Our main interest is the investigation of intergeneric conventions across the three genres, based on the software analysis of three corpora (one for each genre, 1 million words per corpus). The result of the investigation is that intergeneric conventions are found at the level of types of expressed linguistic vagueness, but that intergeneric conventions at the level of actual formulations are rare. The conclusion is that at this latter level the influence from the situation type underlying the individual genre is more important than the overarching legal character of the genres, when we talk about introducing explicit vagueness in the text.
(A)Symmetric Vagueness and the Absolute/Relative Distinction
in A. Aguilar, A. Chernilovskaya, and R. Nouwen (eds). Proceedings of Sinn und Bedeutung 16 (SuB16). MIT Working Papers in Linguistics. (2012)
VAGUENESS, SEMANTICS AND PSYCHOLOGY
forthcoming in The Philosophical Quarterly
According to extension-shifting theories of vagueness, the extensions of vague predicates have sharp boundaries, which... more According to extension-shifting theories of vagueness, the extensions of vague predicates have sharp boundaries, which shift as a function of certain psychological factors. Such theories have been claimed to provide an attractive explanation of the appeal of soritical reasoning. I challenge this claim: the demand for such an explanation need not constrain the semantics of vague predicates at all.
Extensions In Flux: An Essay on Vagueness and Context Sensitivity
Doctoral Thesis
The extensions of vague predicates like ‘is bald’, ‘is tall’, and ‘is a heap’ apparently lack sharp boundaries, and... more The extensions of vague predicates like ‘is bald’, ‘is tall’, and ‘is a heap’ apparently lack sharp boundaries, and this makes such predicates susceptible to soritical reasoning, i.e. reasoning that leads to some version of the notorious sorites paradox. This essay is concerned with a certain kind of theory of vagueness, according to which the symptoms and puzzles of vagueness should be accounted for in terms of a particular species of context sensitivity exhibited by vague expressions. The basic idea is that the extensions of vague predicates vary with certain contextual factors, and that this fact can explain why they appear to lack sharp boundaries. This kind of view is referred to as contextualism about vagueness. A detailed characterisation of contextualism about vagueness is given in chapter two and three. In chapter two, a generic version of contextualism about vagueness is developed, and some alternative forms of context sensitivity are introduced. In chapter three, the specific contextual factors appealed to by different contextualists are discussed. In chapter four, different contextualist diagnoses of the sorites paradox are considered, and found to be problematic in various ways. It is argued that contrary to what some of its proponents have claimed, contextualism about vagueness is not superior to other comparable theories of vagueness when it comes to explaining the appeal of soritical reasoning. In chapter five, a certain version of the sorites paradox, known as the forced march sorites, is discussed. It is argued that “data” about how speakers would behave in the forced march cannot lend any firm support to contextualism about vagueness. In chapter six, some problems concerning the instability of the contextual factors are considered. One problem is that contextualist diagnoses of the sorites which locate a fallacy of equivocation in the reasoning seem to render non-soritical reasoning fallacious as well. A model for treating this problem is suggested, but on closer consideration, it turns out to be problematic. Moreover, this model is of no help in solving the more general problem that even if classical logic remains valid for vague language on some contextualist views, the instability of the extensions of vague predicates makes it difficult to know when a certain piece of reasoning instantiates a valid argument form. Other difficulties arise with respect to speech reports and belief contents. Chapter seven concludes with a summary and some methodological remarks.
Vagueness and Non-Indexical Contextualism
co-authored with Patrick Greenough, published in S. Sawyer (ed.) New Waves in Philosophy of Language, Palgrave Macmillan (2010): 8-23
Hold the Context Fixed, Vagueness Still Remains
co-authored with Patrick Greenough, published in Cuts and Clouds: Vaguenesss, its Nature and its Logic, Edited by Richard Dietz and Sebastiano Moruzzi, Oxford University Press (2010): 275-288.
The Puzzle(s) of Absolute Adjectives: On Vagueness, Comparison, and the Origin of Scale Structure
in Denis Paperno (ed). "UCLA Working Papers in Semantics". 2011
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Seen by:Fuzzy mereology
by Josh Parsons
draft only (2011)
Some philosophers have attempted to solve metaphysical problems about vagueness by understanding objects with vague... more Some philosophers have attempted to solve metaphysical problems about vagueness by understanding objects with vague boundaries as analogous to fuzzy sets. I formulate such a view and argue that it suffers from a serious lacuna, which I attempt to fill.
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Seen by:Varzi on Supervaluationism and Logical Consequence
Mind 120(479): 833-43
Though it is standardly assumed that supervaluationism applied to vagueness is committed to global validity, Achille... more
Though it is standardly assumed that supervaluationism applied to vagueness is committed to global validity, Achille Varzi (2007) argues that the supervaluationist should take seriously the idea of adopting local validity instead. Varzi’s motivation
for the adoption of local validity is largely based on two objections against the global notion: that it brings some counterexamples to classically valid rules of inference and that it is inconsistent with unrestricted higher-order vagueness. In this discussion I review these objections and point out ways to address them not considered in Varzi’s paper
Paraconsistent Vagueness: A Positive Argument
Synthese
Volume 183, Number 2, 211-227, DOI: 10.1007/s11229-010-9760-0
Paraconsistent approaches have received little attention in the literature on vagueness (at least compared to other... more Paraconsistent approaches have received little attention in the literature on vagueness (at least compared to other proposals). The reason seems to be that many philosophers have found the idea that a contradiction might be true (or that a sentence and its negation might both be true) hard to swallow. Even advocates of paraconsistency on vagueness do not look very convinced when they consider this fact; since they seem to have spent more time arguing that paraconsistent theories are at least as good as their paracomplete counterparts, than giving positive reasons to believe on a particular paraconsistent proposal. But it sometimes happens that the weakness of a theory turns out to be its mayor ally, and this is what (I claim) happens in a particular paraconsistent proposal known as subvaluationism. In order to make room for truth-value gluts subvaluationism needs to endorse a notion of logical consequence that is, in some sense, weaker than standard notions of consequence. But this weakness allows the subvaluationist theory to accommodate higher-order vagueness in a way that it is not available to other theories of vagueness (such as, for example, its paracomplete counterpart, supervaluationism).

