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Alan Berger (berger-a)

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Bibliography

    Berger, Alan. 1989. A Theory of Reference Transmission and Reference Change.” in Midwest Studies in Philosophy 14: Contemporary Perspectives in the Philosophy of Language II, edited by Peter A. French, Theodore E. Uehling Jr., and Howard K. Wettstein, pp. 180–198. Notre Dame, Indiana: University of Notre Dame Press.
    Berger, Alan. 1990. A Central Problem for a Speech-Dispositional Account of Logic and Language.” in Perspectives on Quine, edited by Robert B. Barrett and Roger F. Gibson, pp. 17–35. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers.
    Berger, Alan. 1991. Idealized Definitions in Physics and Idealized Dispositions.” in Definitions and Definability: Philosophical Perspectives, edited by James H. Fetzer, David Shatz, and George N. Schlesinger, pp. 223–238. Synthese Library n. 216. Dordrecht: D. Reidel Publishing Co.
    Berger, Alan. 2002a. Terms and Truth. Reference Direct and Anaphoric. Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press.
    Berger, Alan. 2002b. A Formal Semantics for Plural Quantification. Intersentential Binding and Anaphoric Pronouns as Rigid Designators.” Noûs 36(1): 50–74.
    Berger, Alan. 2005. Some Nonobvious Influences of Philosophy on Psychology.” in The Old New Logic. Essays on the Philosophy of Fred Sommers, edited by David S. Oderberg, pp. 85–100. Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press.
    Berger, Alan. 2006a. Précis of Berger (2002a).” Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 72(3): 640–649.
    Berger, Alan. 2006b. Replies [to Lycan (2006), Salmón (2006) and Soames (2006)].” Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 72(3): 674–686.
    Berger, Alan, ed. 2011a. Saul Kripke. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
    Berger, Alan. 2011b. Introduction to Kripke.” in Saul Kripke, edited by Alan Berger, pp. 1–15. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
    Berger, Alan. 2011c. Kripke on the Incoherency of Adopting a Logic.” in Saul Kripke, edited by Alan Berger, pp. 177–210. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
    Berger, Alan. 2015. What does it Mean to Say ‘Water is Necessarily H2O’? in The Philosophy of Hilary Putnam, edited by Randall E. Auxier, Douglas R. Anderson, and Lewis Edwin Hahn, pp. 315–331. The Library of Living Philosophers n. 34. LaSalle, Illinois: Open Court Publishing Co.

Further References

    Lycan, William G. 2006.Berger (2002a) on Fictional Names.” Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 72(3): 650–655.
    Salmón, Nathan. 2005. Metaphysics, Mathematics, and Meaning. Philosophical Papers Volume 1. Oxford: Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/0199284717.001.0001.
    Salmón, Nathan. 2006. Pronouns as Variables [on Berger (2002a)].” Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 72(3): 656–664. “Reprinted” in Salmón (2005, 399–406).
    Soames, Scott. 2006. Descriptive Names vs. Descriptive Anaphora [on Berger (2002a)].” Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 72(3): 665–673.