John Searle

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John Rogers Searle (Denver (Colorado), 31 juli 1932) is an American philosopher and is professor at the department of philosophy on the University of California in Berkeley. He is famous about is contribuitons on the field of language philosophy and the philosophy of the mind. Searle made an important step toward the philosophy with his contributions to the concept of 'social reality'.

In the language philosophe John Searle introduces the term 'speech acts'. He says that speech acts are the base of all insitutions. The social reality is not built by speech acts alone, but it plays an important role. More information about speech acts will be found in this link[1].


Works of John Searle:


  • 1969, Speech Acts: An essay in the philosophy of language.
  • 1971, The Campus War.
  • 1979, Expression and Meaning: Studies in the Theory of Speech Acts.
  • 1983, Intentionality: An Essay in the Philosophy of Mind.
  • 1984, Minds, Brains and Science.
  • 1985, The Foundations of Illocutionary Logic, met Daniel Vanderveken.
  • 1992, The Rediscovery of the Mind.
  • 1995, The Construction of Social Reality.
  • 1997, The Mystery of Consciousness.
  • 1998, Mind, Language and Society, Philosophy in the Real World.
  • 2001, Rationality in Action.
  • 2001, Conversations with John Searle, door Gustavo Feigenbaum.
  • 2002, Consciousness and Language.
  • 2004, Mind.


Source

  • Zierhofer, W., Speech acts and space(s): language pragmatics and the discursive constitution of the social ( Department of Human Geography, University of Nijmegen, 2002)


See also

John Searle [2]

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