3 AMBIGUITY
Sentences are ambiguous in their a priori contexts formally, that is syntactically or semantically, but they are ambiguous with regard to their eventual use pragmatically, that is, non formally. For example, notions of the theory-ladenness of certain fact-descriptions grew first (maybe) in the Philosophy of Science: can the A & L concern with this be taken as pragmatizing it?
-> Ambiguities 11; Context 95;
& A priori 27; Ambiguities 4, 5; Context 99, 100, 102, 104; Heuristic 136, 137, 147, 152; Information Retrieval Systems 180, 181; Meaning 237; Pragmatics 276; Semantics 317; Work, introduction of 406;
2 | 3 | 4