ABSTRACT

The most widely held theory of propositions is one according to which they are structured entities with constituents.3 As Stephen Schiffer puts it, ‘Virtually every propositionalist . . . rejects unstructured propositions’ (2003, 18). Jeff King

NEW ESSAYS ON THE NATURE OF PROPOSITIONS

elaborates: ‘[most propositionalists] assume that an account of propositions on which they are structured entities with constituents and so are individuated more finely than sets of worlds is desirable’ (2007, 3).