semanticism
Semanticism is a term used in philosophy of language and linguistics to describe theories that treat linguistic meaning as determined primarily by semantics—the systematic relationships between signs (words, phrases, sentences) and what they denote—rather than by pragmatics or context of use. In semanticist approaches, the content of a sentence is understood through its semantic composition and its truth-conditions, with much work formalized via model-theoretic semantics or possible-worlds semantics.
Core ideas include compositionality (the meaning of a whole expression follows from the meanings of its parts
Semanticism is often contrasted with pragmatic theories that emphasize context, speaker intention, and conversational implicature. Critics
Historically, semanticist ideas trace to Fregean truth-conditional semantics and were developed through Tarski-style theories, later expanding