PrefacePart I: Languages and Language1. Do Languages Really Exist?, Robert J. Stainton and Christopher Viger2. Possible Human Languages, Zoltán Gendler Szabó3. The Logicality of Language, Meaning-Driven Unacceptability, and Modulated Logic forms, Guillermo Del PinalPart II: Semantic Content and Propositional Attitudes4. Report and Content, Samuel Cumming5. A Plea for Innocence, David Sosa6. Contemporary Foundational Accounts of Propositions, Eleni Manolakaki7.
Multiple Intensions Semantics, Kathrin Glüer and Peter PaginPart III: Communication and Speech Acts8. States of Conversation, Seth Yalcin9. The Distinction Between Content and Force, Peter Hanks10. Do Not Diagonalize, Cameron Domenico Kirk-GianniniPart IV: Meta-semantics and Foundations of Meaning Theory11. Reference without Deference, Herman Cappelen and Max Deutsch12. One Word, Many Concepts: Endorsing Polysemous Meanings, Paul M. Pietroski13. The Problem of Polysemy, Emma Borg14.
Truth, Normativity, and Interpretational Theories of Meaning, Henry Jackman15. Semantic Non-Reductionism, Claudine Verheggen16. Foundations of Semantics, Wayne A. Davis17. Quantifier Domain Restriction and the Problem of Incomplete Quantifiers, Jeffrey C. KingPart V: Tense and Modality18. Future Displacement and Modality, Fabrizio Cariani19. The Semantics and Logic of Counterfactuals, Paolo Santorio20.
Deontic Modal Expressions, J. L. DowellPart VI: Semantics and Linguistic Theory21. Indefinites: Scope and Context, John Collins22. Information Structure for Philosophers, Michael GlanzbergPart VII: Expressive, Evaluative, Subjective, and Social Aspects of Language23. Evaluativity, Isidora Stojanovic24. How Vocatives Illuminate Slurs, Robin Jeshion25. The Metatheoretic Foundation for Racial Epithets, Christopher Hom and Robert May26.
Subjectivity, Malte Willer27. Linguistic Variation, Agency, and Style, Elisabeth Camp and Ethan Nowak.