Susana Nuccetelli
St. Cloud State University
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Metaphilosophy | 2003
Susana Nuccetelli
: A durable question in Latin American thought is whether it could amount to a characteristically Latin American philosophy. I argue that if, as is now widely conceded, there is a role for philosophical analysis in thinking about problems that arise in applied subjects, such as bioethics, environmental ethics, and feminism, then why not also in Latin American thought? After all, the focus of Hispanic thinkers has often been upon the issues that arise in their own experiences of the world, and they make up a diverse group of peoples related by very idiosyncratic ethnic and historical connections. I believe that, given some appropriate criteria, the existing corpus of works by Latin American thinkers is a part of a distinctive philosophy.
Inquiry: Critical Thinking Across the Disciplines | 2004
Susana Nuccetelli
The increasingly pluralistic character of modern societies has led to questions, not only about the proper use of ethnic-group terms, but also about the correct semantic analysis of them. Here I argue that ethnic-group terms are analogous to other linguistic expressions whose extension is fixed in the way suggested by a causal theory of reference. My view accommodates precisely those scenarios of communication involving ethnic-group terms that will be seen puzzling to Fregeans. At the same time, it undermines the plausibility of skepticism about those terms.
Medicine Health Care and Philosophy | 2017
Susana Nuccetelli
A common utilitarian argument in favor of abortion for fetal defects rests on some controversial assumptions about what counts as a life worth living. Yet critics of abortion for fetal defects are also in need of an argument free from controversial assumptions about the future childs quality of life. Christopher Kaczor (in: Kaczor (ed), The ethics of abortion: womens rights, human life, and the question of justice, Routledge, New York, 2011) has devised an analogy that apparently satisfies this condition. On close scrutiny, however, Kaczors analogy is too weak to debunk the common-morality intuition that at least some abortions for fetal defects are morally permissible. The upshot of this discussion is that, on the moral permissibility of abortions for fetal defects, a case-by-case approach is to be preferred.
The Philosophical Forum | 2001
Susana Nuccetelli
I In some ways that have been largely ignored, ethnic-group names might be similar to names of other kinds. If they are, for instance, analogous to proper names, then a correct semantic account of the latter could throw some light on how the meaning of ethnic-group names should be construed. Of course, proper names, together with definite descriptions, belong to the class of singular terms, and an influential view on the semantics of such terms was developed, at the turn of the nineteenth century, from discussion of a puzzle about some differences in the cognitive value of certain statements of identity. Clearly, that a = a (e.g., that Mark Twain was Mark Twain) is trivial, and its truth could be known a priori, just by thinking. On the other hand, that a = b (e.g., that Mark Twain was Samuel Clemens) is of course informative and knowable only by empirical investigation. To solve this puzzle, Frege famously proposed that those variations in the cognitive value of statements of identity can arise only if the difference between the signs corresponds to a difference in the mode of presentation of that which is designated. 1 On his view, although in the above statements of identity, the singular terms, a, and, b, may designate the same thing, they do so with different senses, or under different modes of presentation of that object. When the puzzling statements 2 involving a and b are true, they may then be said to have exactly the same reference. But since those singular terms pick out the object of reference differently (i.e., under different senses or modes of presentation), therefore the cognitive value of these statements also varies significantly. On this account, then, the reference of a non-vacuous proper name is secured by the names sense, or mode of presentation, which constitutes its semantic content. And given that Fregeans (here under the influence of Russell 2) cash out that sense as consisting in whatever concept (or cluster of concepts) could be uniquely associated with that name, they might hold, for example, that the property of being the author of Huckleberry Finn, and that of being an American who lived his early life in Hannibal, Missouri, and later became a famous writer, amount to the senses of Mark Twain, and Samuel Clemens, respectively. Furthermore, since a proper name can refer to an object only in virtue of …
Archive | 2009
Susana Nuccetelli; Ofelia Schutte; Otávio Bueno
Metaphilosophy | 2009
Susana Nuccetelli
The Philosophical Quarterly | 2011
Susana Nuccetelli
Archive | 2017
Susana Nuccetelli
Informal Logic | 2016
Susana Nuccetelli
A Companion to Latin American Philosophy | 2014
Susana Nuccetelli