Media are objects with content and character that we describe using in-
phrases: in the story, in the picture, in the movie, in the dream...
Like the propositional attitudes, these objects present a variety of
hard problems for semantic and philosophical analysis. The Semantics
of Media is an organized exploration of fundamental questions in the
semantics of media.
The first three chapters set out a straightforward model within the
possible-worlds framework, and consider how it might account for a range
of notions applying to media generally: implicit vs. explicit content,
propositional vs. individual content, causal vs. intentional content and
the idea of a single World of the Medium.
The final three chapters examine ways of elaborating the model to cover
a range of phenomena keyed to the functionality of particular forms of
media. Chapter Four is a discussion of fiction and our apparent
reference to fictional characters. Chapter Five deals with the
phenomenon of viewpoint in pictorial media. Chapter Six is a study of
interactions between users and characters of media centering on the
puzzling case of seeing in films.
The Semantics of Media will be of interest to specialists in the
fields of linguistics, philosophy and communications.