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    A speaker holds a sentence to be true in part because of ... — Carmelics
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    Supports→We cannot infer a speaker's belief from honest utterance alone without already knowing the speaker's meaning.
    Supports→We cannot infer a speaker's meaning from honest utterance alone without already knowing the speaker's beliefs.

    A speaker holds a sentence to be true in part because of what the speaker believes.

    Philosophy of LanguageTruth & Knowledge
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    Philosophy of LanguageTruth & Knowledge

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    A speaker holds a sentence to be true in part because of what the speaker means ...If all we have to go on is the fact of honest utterance, we cannot separate the ...If all we have to go on is the fact of honest utterance, we have no chance of in...

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    A central source of trouble is the way beliefs and meanings conspire to account for utterances. A speaker who holds a sentence to be true on an occasion does so in part because of what he means, or would mean, by an utterance of that sentence, and in part because of what he believes. If all we have to go on is the fact of honest utterance, we cannot infer the belief without knowing the meaning, and have no chance of inferring the meaning without the belief. (Davidson 1974a: 314; see also Davidso

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