Full Idea
Do we attribute a logical form to a sentence token because it is a token of a type with that form, or do we attribute a logical form to a sentence type because it is a type of a token with that form?
Gist of Idea
Is it the sentence-token or the sentence-type that has a logical form?
Source
Kit Fine (Quine on Quantifying In [1990], p.110)
Book Reference
Fine,Kit: 'Modality and Tense' [OUP 2005], p.110
A Reaction
Since I believe in propositions (as the unambiguous thought that lies behind a sentence), I take it that logical form concerns propositions, though strict logicians don't like this, for fear that logic spills into psychology.