Akiba, Ken [2002] 'A deflationist approach to indeterminacy and vagueness', Philosophical Studies 107, pp. 69-86.
Deflationists cannot make sense of the notion of referential indeterminacy because they deny the existence of substantive reference. One way for them to make sense of the objective existence of linguistic indeterminacy is by embracing the worldly (or objectual) view of indeterminacy, the view that indeterminacy exists not in reference relations but in the (non-linguistic) world itself. On this view, the entire world is divided into precisified worlds, just as it is divided into temporal slices and (arguably) alethic possible worlds. Supervaluationism proves to be neutral with respect to the debate between the worldly view and the referential view of indeterminacy.