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  1.  53
    Evans, transparency, and Cartesianism.David Zapero - 2020 - European Journal of Philosophy 28 (3):685-702.
    In The Varieties of Reference, Evans makes two parallel claims about thought and perception. He argues that both our capacity to self-ascribe thought and our capacity to self-ascribe perception are fallible. The essay focuses on his claim about perception and examines its relation to Evans's project of rejecting a Cartesian conception of the mind. In his theory of perception, I argue, Evans embraces a conception of first-person authority that he seeks to reject in his account of thought. He is thus (...)
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  2.  44
    Truth, testimony, and self-deception.David Zapero - 2020 - Philosophical Explorations 23 (3):281-291.
    The essay explores Richard Moran’s conception of the self-relation that certain social interactions involve. My focus is on the following question: how much room is there for being deceived about h...
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  3.  38
    On Trying to Leave Truth Alone.David Zapero - 2021 - Philosophical Quarterly 72 (1):197-217.
    According to a certain conception of language, any sentence can, when used on an occasion, have any of indefinitely many truth-conditions. Such a conception of language gives us reason to think that the question of whether the notion of truth has a distinctive content cannot be settled by looking solely at the predication of truth. By focusing on the predicate ‘true’ when trying to determine the significance of the notion of truth, we may have been looking in the wrong place.
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  4.  4
    Context, Truth, and Objectivity: Essays on Radical Contextualism.Eduardo Marchesan & David Zapero (eds.) - 2018 - London: Routledge.
    The claim according to which there is a categorial gap between meaning and saying ¿ between what sentences mean and what we say by using them on particular occasions ¿ has come to be widely regarded as being exclusively a claim in the philosophy of language. The present essay collection takes a different approach to these issues. It seeks to explore the ways in which that claim ¿ as defended first by ordinary language philosophy and, more recently, by various contextualist (...)
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  5.  8
    Hostage to a Stranger.David Zapero - 2018 - In Christian Georg Martin (ed.), Language, Form(s) of Life, and Logic: Investigations After Wittgenstein. Berlin and Boston: De Gruyter. pp. 305-330.
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  6.  24
    La doctrine kantienne du Faktum de la raison et la justification de la loi morale.David Zapero - 2016 - Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie 98 (2):169-192.
    Name der Zeitschrift: Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie Jahrgang: 98 Heft: 2 Seiten: 169-192.
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  7.  34
    Liberal naturalism, objectivity and the autonomy of the mental.David Zapero - 2019 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 62 (5):546-564.
    ABSTRACTThe paper distinguishes between two different ways of cashing out the general insight that often goes by the name of ‘liberal naturalism’. The objective is to show how these two different argumentative strategies undergird two fundamentally different approaches to the project of elucidating the specificity of mental phenomena. On one approach, the central concern of such a project is the ontological status of subjective conscious phenomena; on the other, the central concern is the irreducibility of parochial capacities in the adoption (...)
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  8.  4
    Le sens de la transparence.David Zapero - 2022 - Revue Internationale de Philosophie 300 (2):37-57.
    Au cœur du Tractatus logico-philosophicus est le projet de délimiter « la forme générale de la proposition ». Nous nous intéressons à un versant de ce projet : l’analyse de la notion de vérité. Nous examinons cette analyse et nous identifions quelques-unes de ses conséquences majeures. Puis, nous revenons sur les remarques que fait Wittgenstein sur cette analyse dans les Recherches philosophiques, où l’interrogation sur la possibilité d’une telle analyse sert à remettre en question le projet même du Tractatus.
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