
This paper provides an account of anonymous speech treated as anonymized speech. It is argued that anonymous speech acts are best defined by reference to intentional acts of blocking a speaker's identification as opposed to the various epistemic effects that imperfectly correlate with these actions. The account is used to examine two important subclasses of anonymized speech: speech using pseudonyms, and speech anonymized in a specifically communicative manner. Several pragmatic and ethical issues with anonymized speech are considered.
anonymity, pseudonyms, speaker intentions, speech acts, Original Articles, 603113 Philosophy, anonymous speech, 603113 Philosophie, identifying information
anonymity, pseudonyms, speaker intentions, speech acts, Original Articles, 603113 Philosophy, anonymous speech, 603113 Philosophie, identifying information
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