ABSTRACT

The materials for this paper are: one familiar and fundamental speech-function;

one controversy in philosophical logic; and two or three platitudes.

We are to be concerned with statements in which, at least ostensibly, some

particular historical fact or event or state of affairs, past or present, notable or

trivial, is reported: as that the emperor has lost a battle or the baby has lost its rattle

or the emperor is dying or the baby is crying. More exactly, we are to be concerned

with an important subclass of such statements, viz. those in which the task of

specifying just the historical state of affairs which is being reported includes, as an

essential part, the sub-task of designating some particular historical item or items

which the state of affairs involves. Not all performances of the reporting task

include the performance of this sub-task - the task, I shall call it, of identifying

reference to a particular item. Thus, the report that it is raining now, or the report

that it was raining here an hour ago, do not. But the statement that Caesar is dying,

besides specifying the historical fact or situation which it is the function of the

statement as a whole to report, has, as a part of this function, the sub-function of

designating a particular historical item, viz. Caesar, which that situation essentially

involves. And this part of the function of the whole statement is the whole of the

function of part of the statement, viz. of the name ‘Caesar’.