Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/De_se> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 32 of
32
with 100 triples per page.
- De_se abstract "De se is Latin for "of oneself" and, in philosophy, it is a phrase used to mark off what some believe to be a category of ascription distinct from "de dicto and de re".Jonathan Kvanvig draws the distinction as follows. A person may believe that a proposition is true. This is de dicto. A person may believe of an object that it has a certain property. This is de re. A person may also believe of himself that he, himself has a certain property. This is de se.David Lewis's article (below) gave birth to the topic, and his expression of it draws heavily on his distinctive theory of possible worlds.A sentence such as: "Peter thinks that he is pale" where the pronoun "he" is meant to refer to Peter is ambiguous in a way not captured by the de dicto / de re distinction. Such a sentence could report that Peter has the following thought: "I am pale". Or Peter could have the following thought: "he is pale", where it so happens that the pronoun "he" refers to Peter, but Peter is unaware of it. The first meaning expresses a belief de se, while the second does not.This notion is now thoroughly discussed in the philosophical literature, but especially in the theoretical linguistic literature, the latter because some linguistic phenomena clearly are sensitive to this notion.This can be illustrated simply. Imagine the following scenario:Peter, who is running for office, is drunk. He is watching an interview of a candidate on TV, not realizing that this candidate is himself. Liking what he hears, he says: "I hope this candidate gets elected." Having witnessed this, one can truthfully report Peter's hopes by uttering: "Peter hopes that he will get elected", where "he" refers to Peter, since "this candidate" indeed refers to Peter. However, one could not report Peter's hopes by saying: "Peter hopes to get elected". This last sentence is only appropriate if Peter had a de se hope, that is a hope in the first person as if he had said "I hope I get elected", which is not the case here.".
- De_se wikiPageID "12331566".
- De_se wikiPageLength "3035".
- De_se wikiPageOutDegree "5".
- De_se wikiPageRevisionID "675578470".
- De_se wikiPageWikiLink Category:Latin_philosophical_phrases.
- De_se wikiPageWikiLink Category:Philosophy_of_language.
- De_se wikiPageWikiLink David_Kellogg_Lewis.
- De_se wikiPageWikiLink David_Lewis_(philosopher).
- De_se wikiPageWikiLink De_dicto_and_de_re.
- De_se wikiPageWikiLink Possible_world.
- De_se wikiPageWikiLinkText "De se".
- De_se hasPhotoCollection De_se.
- De_se wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Italic_title.
- De_se wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Latin-vocab-stub.
- De_se wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Ling-stub.
- De_se wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Philo-stub.
- De_se wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- De_se subject Category:Latin_philosophical_phrases.
- De_se subject Category:Philosophy_of_language.
- De_se hypernym Latin.
- De_se type Article.
- De_se type Person.
- De_se type Article.
- De_se comment "De se is Latin for "of oneself" and, in philosophy, it is a phrase used to mark off what some believe to be a category of ascription distinct from "de dicto and de re".Jonathan Kvanvig draws the distinction as follows. A person may believe that a proposition is true. This is de dicto. A person may believe of an object that it has a certain property. This is de re. A person may also believe of himself that he, himself has a certain property.".
- De_se label "De se".
- De_se sameAs De_se.
- De_se sameAs m.02v_k_8.
- De_se sameAs Q5244981.
- De_se sameAs Q5244981.
- De_se wasDerivedFrom De_se?oldid=675578470.
- De_se isPrimaryTopicOf De_se.