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Full Idea
Austin's account brought out the variety of features covered by 'vague' in different contexts: roughness, ambiguity, imprecision, lack of detail, generality, inaccuracy, incompleteness. Even 'vague' is vague.
Gist of Idea
Austin revealed many meanings for 'vague': rough, ambiguous, general, incomplete...
Source
report of J.L. Austin (Sense and Sensibilia [1962], p.125-8) by Timothy Williamson - Vagueness 3.1
Book Ref
Williamson,Timothy: 'Vagueness' [Routledge 1996], p.71
A Reaction
Some of these sound the same. Maybe Austin distinguishes them.
Related Idea
Idea 9769 Vagueness can be in predicates, names or quantifiers [Fine,K]
21598 | Austin revealed many meanings for 'vague': rough, ambiguous, general, incomplete... [Austin,JL, by Williamson] |
23540 | Conjoining two indefinites by related sentences seems to produce a contradiction [Fine,K] |
23544 | Local indeterminacy concerns a single object, and global indeterminacy covers a range [Fine,K] |
23546 | Standardly vagueness involves borderline cases, and a higher standpoint from which they can be seen [Fine,K] |
21589 | When bivalence is rejected because of vagueness, we lose classical logic [Williamson] |
21596 | Vagueness undermines the stable references needed by logic [Williamson] |
21601 | A vague term can refer to very precise elements [Williamson] |