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Intentionality is for something to be about something. But this definition could also suffice for meaning: something can have meaning if it is about something. What is the major distinction between intentionality and meaning? I understand that different philosophers treat the concepts of intentionality and meaning differently, so I'm mainly looking for broad intuition here.

RECURSIVE FARTS
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  • Who specifically are you reading? "Broad intuition" is not going to be very helpful here. – virmaior Dec 06 '15 at 00:19
  • Brentano and Dennett specifically, but my confusion seems to apply to all philosophers talking about intentionality haha – RECURSIVE FARTS Dec 06 '15 at 00:36
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    One possible distinction (and I think according to e.g. Kant and Husserl) is that intentionality is an *act* of a *subject* while meaning is a *property* of a *linguistic expression*, may it be a sentence, term or "concept". That is quite a difference. – Philip Klöcking Dec 06 '15 at 02:22

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A first reference is SEP:

Concerning intentionality see http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/intentionality/ Accordingly

Intentionality is the power of minds to be about, to represent, or to stand for, things, properties and states of affairs.

Concerning meaning see http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/meaning/ Accordingly meaning is a property of words, sentences and - more general - symbols of a language:

The first sort of theory - a semantic theory - is a theory which assigns semantic contents to expressions of a language. [...] The second sort of theory - a foundational theory of meaning - is a theory which states the facts in virtue of which expressions have the semantic contents that they have.

Jo Wehler
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