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  1. The Roots of Reference. w. v. QUINE, with an introduction by NELSON GOODMAN. LaSalle, Illinois: Open Court, 1974. xi, 151 p. $10.00. There is a difference between discriminating colors or bodies and referring to them. This is true even when language is used to mark these discriminations. Someone who distinguishes red things from

  2. The roots of pictorial reference. Jenifer Todd - 1980 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 39 (1):47-57. Quine's double standard: undermining the indispensability argument via the indeterminacy of reference.

  3. Quine, Willard Van Orman Contents: Pt. 1. Perceiving And Learning -- Pt. 2. Breaking Into Language -- Pt. 3. Referring To Obj Open Court Publ. Comp

  4. The Problem of Reference to Nonexistents in Cocchiarella’s Conceptual Realism. Andriy Vasylchenko - 2009 - Axiomathes 19 (2):155-166. Abstract Objects in a Metaphysical Perspective.

  5. Genetic Explanation in The Roots of Reference. Charles Parsons - 1990 - In Barret And Gibson (ed.), Perspectives on Quine. pp. 273--90.

  6. This is a proposal as to how the reference of names is fixed: as in Kripke's account, a distinction is to be maintained between fixing the reference of a proper name and giving its meaning. In any counterfactual situation, the referent of the name is that object that meets the indicated requirement in the actual world.

  7. The Roots of Reference falls within that domain. Its more specific concern, within that domain, is reference to concrete and abstract objects: what such reference consists in, and how we achieve it."Part I is a statement of general psychological presumptions regarding perception and learning.