The form of semantic contextualism discussed above must be distinguished from an alternative according to which thick terms and concepts are context-sensitive with respect to extension without being context-sensitive with respect to evaluative valence. This alternative treats their context-sensitivity only as an unsurprising special case of some already familiar sort of context-sensitivity exhibited by other expressions. It is familiar, for example, that gradable expressions like tall and loud are context-sensitive, and many thick terms and concepts are gradable. For instance, selfish might be regarded as context-sensitive with respect to which preferences for one’s own happiness over just how much greater a happiness for others counts as selfish. This hypothesis about context-sensitivity is compatible both with views according to which thick terms and concepts are inherently evaluative in meaning and with views that deny this. Variability in evaluative valence would presumably receive a semantic invariantist explanation in the former case and a broadly pragmatic one in the latter.
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