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    Excluding sneaky intentions on openness grounds therefore... — Carmelics
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    Challenges→Sneaky intentions must be ruled out of speech act analyses based on communicative intentions

    Excluding sneaky intentions on openness grounds therefore rules out a recognized class of genuine, theoretically tractable communicative acts rather than merely pathological cases.

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    Key Terms

    Openness grounds(as used in philosophy of communication)
    Reasons or principles based on the idea that communication should be honest and transparent, without hidden agendas.
    Pathological cases(describing unusual experiences with limbs)
    Situations where something goes wrong with the body or mind in unusual or extreme ways, used here to mean medical or psychological conditions that aren't normal.
    Theoretically tractable(as used in philosophical methodology)
    Something that philosophers and researchers can actually study and make sense of using existing theories and methods, rather than something too messy or unclear to analyze.
    communicative acts(Philosophy of law)
    Acts by which rules are made through language, such as the enactment of legislation
    sneaky intentions

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    (Speech act theory; philosophy of language)
    Intentions to mislead in communication, which violate the requirement that a speaker's communicative intentions be fully accessible to the hearer

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