Truth-conditional semantics
Table of contents
Truth-conditional semantics is a theory of the meaning of natural language sentences. It takes the language–world relation as the basic concern of semantics rather than the language–mind relation: language is about states of affairs in the world. The semantic competence of a speaker–hearer is said to consist in his/her knowledge, for any sentence of his/her language, of how the world would have to be for that sentence to be true.
References
Carston, R.
Frege, G
Grice, P
Grice, P.
Larson, R.
Tarski, A.
Wilson, D. & D. Sperber