Course Info: CS-0234

CourseCS-0234 Semantics
Long TitleSemantics
Term2018S
Note(s) Textbook information
Meeting InfoFranklin Patterson HallüFranklin Patterson Hall 108ü105 on M,WüM from 10:30-11:50ü10:30-11:50
FacultyDaniel Altshuler
Capacity25
Available6
Waitlist0
Distribution(s) Mind, Brain, and Information
Cumulative Skill(s)Writing and Research
Quantitative Skills
Additional InfoIn this course, students are expected to spend at least six to eight hours a week of preparation and work outside of class time. This time includes reading, writing, research.
Description

This course served as an introduction to a scientific approach to meaning. Just like any scientist, a semanticist does not pursue the object of inquiry (i.e. meaning) directly, but rather focuses on related phenomena. We focused on composition: the idea that the meaning of a whole (e.g. "spotted butterfly") is a composite of the meanings of its parts (e.g. the meaning of "spotted" and the meaning of "butterfly"). We also focused on truth: the idea that we understand the meaning of a sentence by understanding what the world would have to be like for the sentence in question to be true (e.g. you understand the meaning of "It is raining in Seattle" because you know what the world would have to be like for that sentence to be true). These two phenomena allowed us to analyze the meanings of nouns, adjectives, verbs, adverbs, quantifiers, tenses and the sentences that contain these expressions.