منتديات تخاطب: ملتقى الفلاسفة واللسانيين واللغويين والأدباء والمثقفين
عزيزي الزائر / عزيزتي الزائرة
تسجيلك في هذا المنتدى يأخذ منك لحظات ولكنه يعطيك امتيازات خاصة كالنسخ والتحميل والتعليق
وإضافة موضوع جديد والتخاطب مع الأعضاء ومناقشتهم
فإن لم تكن مسجلا من قبل فيرجى التسجيل، وإن كنت قد سجّلت فتفضّل
بإدخال اسم العضوية

يمكنك الدخول باستخدام حسابك في الفيس بوك



ستحتاج إلى تفعيل حسابك من بريدك الإلكتروني بعد تسجيلك هنا
التسجيل بالأسماء الحقيقية ثنائية أو ثلاثية وباللغة العربيّة فقط
منتديات تخاطب: ملتقى الفلاسفة واللسانيين واللغويين والأدباء والمثقفين
عزيزي الزائر / عزيزتي الزائرة
تسجيلك في هذا المنتدى يأخذ منك لحظات ولكنه يعطيك امتيازات خاصة كالنسخ والتحميل والتعليق
وإضافة موضوع جديد والتخاطب مع الأعضاء ومناقشتهم
فإن لم تكن مسجلا من قبل فيرجى التسجيل، وإن كنت قد سجّلت فتفضّل
بإدخال اسم العضوية

يمكنك الدخول باستخدام حسابك في الفيس بوك



ستحتاج إلى تفعيل حسابك من بريدك الإلكتروني بعد تسجيلك هنا
التسجيل بالأسماء الحقيقية ثنائية أو ثلاثية وباللغة العربيّة فقط
منتديات تخاطب: ملتقى الفلاسفة واللسانيين واللغويين والأدباء والمثقفين
هل تريد التفاعل مع هذه المساهمة؟ كل ما عليك هو إنشاء حساب جديد ببضع خطوات أو تسجيل الدخول للمتابعة.

منتديات تخاطب: ملتقى الفلاسفة واللسانيين واللغويين والأدباء والمثقفين

تهتم بـ الفلسفة والثقافة والإبداع والفكر والنقد واللغة
 
الرئيسيةأحدث الصورالتسجيلدخول
تعلن إدارة المنتديات عن تعيين الأستاذ بلال موقاي نائباً للمدير .... نبارك له هذه الترقية ونرجو من الله أن يوفقه ويعينه على أعبائه الجديدة وهو أهل لها إن شاء الله تعالى
للاطلاع على فهرس الموقع اضغط على منتديات تخاطب ثم انزل أسفله
» هات يدك Pragmatics part 02 I_icon_minitime2023-12-13, 15:27 من طرف عبدالحكيم ال سنبل» بين «بياجيه» و «تشومسكي» مقـاربة حـول كيفيـة اكتسـاب اللغـةPragmatics part 02 I_icon_minitime2023-12-03, 20:02 من طرف سدار محمد عابد» نشيد الفجرPragmatics part 02 I_icon_minitime2023-11-30, 14:48 من طرف عبدالحكيم ال سنبل» الرذ والديناصورPragmatics part 02 I_icon_minitime2023-11-02, 18:04 من طرف عبدالحكيم ال سنبل» سلاما على غزةPragmatics part 02 I_icon_minitime2023-11-01, 18:42 من طرف عبدالحكيم ال سنبل» سلاما على غزةPragmatics part 02 I_icon_minitime2023-11-01, 18:40 من طرف عبدالحكيم ال سنبل» شهد الخلودPragmatics part 02 I_icon_minitime2023-11-01, 18:35 من طرف عبدالحكيم ال سنبل» تهجيرPragmatics part 02 I_icon_minitime2023-11-01, 18:23 من طرف عبدالحكيم ال سنبل» تقرير من غزة Pragmatics part 02 I_icon_minitime2023-11-01, 18:18 من طرف عبدالحكيم ال سنبل» القدس لناPragmatics part 02 I_icon_minitime2023-11-01, 17:51 من طرف عبدالحكيم ال سنبل» يوم في غزة Pragmatics part 02 I_icon_minitime2023-11-01, 17:45 من طرف عبدالحكيم ال سنبل» شعب عجبPragmatics part 02 I_icon_minitime2023-11-01, 17:41 من طرف عبدالحكيم ال سنبل» سمكة تحت التخديرPragmatics part 02 I_icon_minitime2023-10-07, 15:34 من طرف عبدالحكيم ال سنبل» تجربة حبPragmatics part 02 I_icon_minitime2023-09-16, 23:25 من طرف عبدالحكيم ال سنبل» زلزال و اعصارPragmatics part 02 I_icon_minitime2023-09-14, 05:44 من طرف عبدالحكيم ال سنبل

شاطر
 

 Pragmatics part 02

استعرض الموضوع التالي استعرض الموضوع السابق اذهب الى الأسفل 
كاتب الموضوعرسالة
محمد بكاي التلمساني
عضو شرف
عضو شرف


وسام النشاط :
وسام النشاط

القيمة الأصلية

البلد :
الجزائر

عدد المساهمات :
210

نقاط :
602

تاريخ التسجيل :
15/08/2010

المهنة :
باحث وكاتب


Pragmatics part 02 Empty
مُساهمةموضوع: Pragmatics part 02   Pragmatics part 02 I_icon_minitime2010-09-28, 19:07

Do we need four different kinds of analysis for literal, vague, loose, and figurative meanings? Relevance theory is unique in proposing a unified account of all these cases. From the general claim that an utterance is a piece of evidence about the speaker’s meaning, it follows, at the lexical level, that the function of words in an utterance is not to encode but merely to indicate the concepts that are constituents of the speaker’s meaning. We are not denying that words do encode concepts (or at least semantic features), and that they are (at least partly) decoded during the comprehension process; however, we are claiming that the output of decoding is merely a point of departure for identifying the concepts intended by the speaker. The presence in an utterance of an expression with a given sense licenses a variety of (typically non-demonstrative) inferences. Some of these inferences contribute to satisfying the hearer’s expectations of relevance, and are therefore drawn. Others don’t, and aren’t. In the process, there is a mutual adjustment between explicatures and implicatures. The decoded content helps to identify the inferences that make the utterance relevant as expected, and is readjusted so as to warrant just those inferences that contribute to the relevance of the utterance as a whole. In particular, the constituent concepts of the explicature are constructed ad hoc, starting from the linguistically encoded concepts, but quite often departing from them so as to optimise the relevance of the overall interpretation (Carston 1997, 2002: chapter 5; Sperber & Wilson 1998a; Wilson & Sperber 2002; Wilson 2003).

Suppose, for instance, you have a lecture one afternoon, but don’t know exactly when it is due to start. You are told, ‘The lecture starts at five o’clock.’ From this utterance, and in particular from the phrase ‘at five o’clock’, together with contextual premises, you can draw a number of inferences that make the utterance relevant to you: that you will not be free to do other things between five and seven o’clock, that you should leave the library no later than 4.45, that it will be too late to go shopping after the lecture, and so on. None of these inferences depends on ‘five o’ clock’ being strictly understood. There are inferences that depend on a strict interpretation (for instance, that the lecture will have begun by 5.01), but they don’t contribute to the relevance of the utterance, and you don’t draw them. According to the relevance-theoretic approach, you then take the speaker to be committed to the truth of a proposition that warrants just the implications you did derive, a proposition which might be paraphrased, say, as ‘The lecture starts between five o’clock and ten past,’ but which you, the hearer, would have no need to try and formulate exactly in your mind. Note that if the speaker had uttered the more accurate ‘between five o’clock and ten past’ instead of the approximation ‘at five o’clock,’ the overall effort required for comprehension would have been increased rather than reduced, since you would have had to process a longer sentence and a more complex meaning without any saving on the inferential level. Note, too, that we cannot explain how this approximation is understood by assuming that the standard of precision in force allows for, say, a variation of ten minutes around the stated time. If the lecture might start ten minutes earlier than five o’clock, then the inferences worth drawing would not be the same.

This process of ad hoc concept construction via mutual adjustment of explicatures and implicatures is quite general. It works in the same way with metaphors. Consider the metaphor ‘John is a computer’ in two different exchanges:

20a. Peter: Is John a good accountant?

20b. Mary: John is a computer.

21a. Peter: How good a friend is John?

21b. Mary: John is a computer.

In each case, the encoded sense of ‘computer’ draws the hearer’s attention to some features of computers that they may share with some human beings. Like the best accountants, computers can process large amounts of numerical information and never make mistakes, and so on. Unlike good friends, computers lack emotions, and so on. In each case, Peter builds an ad hoc concept indicated, though not encoded, by the word ‘computer’, such that John’s falling under this concept has implications that answer the question in (20a) or (21a). Note that Mary need not have in mind the precise implications that Peter will derive, as long as her utterance encourages him to derive the kind of implications that answer his question along the intended lines. So the Romantics were right to argue that the figurative meaning of a live metaphor cannot be properly paraphrased. However, this is not because the meaning is some non-truth-conditional set of associations or ‘connotations’. It is because it consists of an ad hoc concept that is characterised by its inferential role and not by a definition, and moreover this inferential role, to a much greater extent than in the case of mere approximations, is left to the hearer to elaborate. Metaphorical communication is relatively weak communication.

In the case of approximations or metaphors, concept construction results in a broadening of the encoded concept; in other cases, as in (5a) (‘I’ll bring a bottle’) and (6b) above, it results in a narrowing. Recall that in (6), Lisa has dropped by her neighbours, the Joneses, who have just sat down to supper:

6a. Alan Jones: Do you want to join us for supper?

6b. Lisa: No, thanks. I’ve eaten.

As noted above, in order to produce a relevant interpretation of Lisa’s answer ‘I’ve eaten’, some enrichment of the encoded sentence meaning must take place. In particular, the time span indicated by the perfect ‘have eaten’ must be narrowed down to the evening of utterance, and ‘eaten’ must be understood as conveying the ad hoc concept EAT SUPPER. If Lisa has eaten supper on the previous day, or eaten an olive that evening, she would literally have eaten, but not in a relevant sense. In still other cases, the result of the same process of meaning construction is that the concept indicated by use of the word ‘eaten’ as a constituent of the intended meaning is the very one it encodes. If Lisa is supposed to follow a religious fast and says ‘I’ve eaten’, then the concept EAT that is part of her meaning is just the linguistically-encoded one: a single olive is enough to break a fast.

The comprehension process itself does not involve classifying interpretations as literal, approximate, loose, metaphorical, and so on. These classifications belong to linguistic theories, including folk and philosophical theories, and play a role in metalinguistic arguments. However, a pragmatic approach suggests that these notions may denote regions on a continuum rather than sharply distinct categories, and may play no role in a proper theory of language use.

6. Procedural meaning: speech acts, presuppositions and indexicals

We have tried to show that a contextualist approach to semantics combined with a relevance-oriented approach to pragmatics can yield appropriate accounts of speaker’s meaning. Starting with the strongest candidates for literalist treatment – constructions which are plausibly analysed as encoding concepts that contribute to explicit truth-conditional content – we have argued that even with these strongest candidates the case for literalism does not go through. Many aspects of explicit truth-conditional content are not encoded at all, and utterances do not always communicate the concepts they encode. Moreover, a wide range of linguistic constructions contribute to other aspects of speaker’s meaning than explicit truth-conditional content, or encode aspects of meaning that are not plausibly analysed in conceptual terms. Examples include illocutionary force indicators, presupposition triggers, indexicals and demonstratives, focusing devices, parentheticals, discourse connectives, argumentative operators, prosody, interjections, and so on. Because these constructions fall outside the scope of standard literalist approaches, their linguistic meaning is sometimes characterised as ‘pragmatic’ rather than semantic (although the proposed analyses have rarely shown much concern for how they might contribute to a properly inferential pragmatics). We see these items as providing strong evidence for a contextualist approach to semantics combined with a relevance-oriented pragmatics, and will end by briefly considering how they might be approached within the framework we have outlined.

Speech-act theorists such as Austin, Searle, Katz and Bach & Harnish underlined the fact that a speaker’s meaning should be seen not merely as a set of (asserted) propositions, but as a set of propositions each with a recommended propositional attitude or illocutionary force. The treatment of illocutionary and attitudinal meaning has developed in parallel to the treatment of explicit truth-conditional content, with early literalist accounts replaced by more contextualist accounts in which the role of speakers’ intentions and pragmatic inference is increasingly recognised.[17] In relevance theory, these non-truth-conditional aspects of speaker’s meaning are analysed as higher-level explicatures constructed (like the basic explicatures considered in section 4) by development of encoded schematic sentence meanings. In uttering (22), for example, Mary might convey not only the basic explicature in (23a), which constitutes the explicit truth-conditional content of her utterance, but a range of higher-level explicatures such as (23b-d) (any of which might contribute to overall relevance):

22. Confidentially, I didn’t enjoy the meal.

23a. Mary didn’t enjoy the meal.

23b. Mary is telling Peter confidentially that she didn’t enjoy the meal.

23c. Mary is admitting confidentially to Peter that she didn’t enjoy the meal.

23d. Mary believes she didn’t enjoy the meal.

As this example shows, higher-level explicatures, like basic explicatures, are recovered through a combination of decoding and inference, and may be more or less explicit. Thus, Mary could have made her meaning more explicit by uttering (24), and left it less explicit by merely indicating through her behaviour or tone of voice that she was speaking to Peter in confidence:

24. I tell you confidentially, I didn’t enjoy the meal.

Speech-act theorists distinguish describing from indicating. Descriptive expressions may be seen as encoding concepts in the regular way (although we have argued that the encoded concept gives no more than a schematic indication of the speaker’s meaning). Indicators are seen as carrying other types of information, which contribute to speaker’s meaning in other ways than by encoding regular concepts. As illustrated by (22)-(24)(‘Confidentially, I didn’t enjoy the meal’, ‘I tell you confidentially, I didn’t enjoy the meal’), higher-level explicatures may be conveyed by a mixture of describing and indicating. While illocutionary adverbials and parentheticals such as ‘confidentially’, ‘I tell you confidentially’, ‘I tell you in total and utter confidence’ clearly have descriptive content, mood indicators such as declarative or interrogative word order, imperative, indicative or subjunctive verb morphology and exclamatory or interrogative intonation fall on the indicating side. How is their encoded meaning to be analysed, if not in conceptual terms? We would like to suggest that their semantic function is to guide the hearer in the inferential construction of higher-level explicatures by narrowing the search space, increasing the salience of certain candidates, and diminishing the salience of others. In some cases, the search space may be reduced to a single plausible candidate, while in others, there may be several, so that the resulting implicatures may be stronger or weaker. As expected, conceptual encoding leads to stronger communication than linguistic indication (Wilson & Sperber 1988, 1993; Sperber & Wilson 1986/95: chapter 4.10; Ifantidou 2001).

As noted at the beginning of this section, languages have a rich variety of indicators, which contribute to other aspects of speaker’s meaning than illocutionary force; in the framework we have outlined, these would be analysed on similar lines to mood indicators, as contributing to relevance by guiding the hearer towards the intended explicit content, context or conclusions. Consider, for instance, the contribution of the indexical or demonstrative ‘here’ to the explicit truth-conditional content of (25):

25. I have been here for two hours.

The semantic function of ‘here’ is simultaneously to indicate that a referent is required and to restrict the search space to a certain class of candidates, some of which may be made more salient by gesture, direction of gaze or discourse context (and will therefore be more accessible to the relevance-theoretic comprehension heuristic). Even when all these clues are taken into account, they may not determine a unique interpretation. For example, (25) may be true (and relevant) if ‘here’ is understood to mean ‘in this library’, but false if understood to mean ‘in this room’ or ‘on this spot’. The encoded meaning of ‘here’ is only a clue to the speaker’s meaning, which is recovered, as always, by mutual adjustment of explicatures and implicatures in the search for optimal relevance.

Finally, a range of items such as ‘even’, ‘still’, ‘but’, ‘indeed’, ‘also’ and ‘after all’, which have been seen as encoding information about ‘presuppositions’, conventional implicatures or argumentative orientation instead of (or as well as) descriptive information,[18] may be analysed as restricting the search space for implicated premises and conclusions, or as indicating what type of inferential process the hearer is intended to go through in establishing relevance. To give just one illustration, compare (26a) and (26b):

26a. John is a philosopher and he enjoys detective stories.

26b. John is a philosopher but he enjoys detective stories.

As these examples show, although ‘and’ and ‘but’ are descriptively equivalent, they orient the hearer towards different types of interpretation (Ducrot 1984; Blakemore 1987, 2002; Hall 2004). The use of ‘and’ in (26a), for example, is compatible with an interpretation in which the fact that John enjoys detective stories is unsurprising given that he is a philosopher, while the use of ‘but’ in (26b) suggests an interpretation in which the fact that John is a philosopher makes it surprising that he enjoys detective stories. The effect of ‘but’ is to narrow the search space for inferential comprehension by facilitating access to certain types of context or conclusion: it may therefore be seen, like mood indicators and indexicals, as indicating a rather abstract property of the speaker’s meaning: the direction in which relevance is to be sought.[19]

The few attempts that have been made to provide a unified account of indicators have been based on the speech act distinction between conditions on use and conditions on truth (Recanati 2004b). However, as noted above, not all indicators are analysable in speech-act terms, and the distinction between conditions on truth and conditions on use runs the risk of becoming trivial or non-explanatory when removed from the speech-act framework. While it is clear why certain acts have felicity conditions (e.g. only someone with the appropriate authority can give an order, perform a baptism, and so on), it is not clear why linguistic expressions such as ‘it’ and ‘that’, or ‘even’ and ‘also’, which have no obvious analysis in speech-act terms, should have conditions on their appropriate use. By contrast, if the function of indicators is to contribute to inferential comprehension by guiding the hearer towards the speaker’s meaning, the conditions on their use fall out as a natural consequence. More generally, from a radical literalist perspective, it is surprising to find any items at all that contribute to meaning without encoding concepts. From the perspective outlined in this chapter, there is no presumption that all linguistic meaning should be either conceptual or truth-conditional: the only requirement on linguistic meaning is that it guide the hearer towards the speaker’s meaning by indicating the direction in which relevance is to be sought.

7. Conclusion

When pragmatics emerged as a distinct discipline at the end of the 1960s, analytic philosophy was dominated by philosophy of language, and the cognitive sciences were still in their infancy. Since then, as the cognitive sciences have matured and expanded, priority in philosophy has shifted from philosophy of language to philosophy of mind. The development of pragmatics reflects this shift. Part of Grice’s originality was to approach meaning as a primarily psychological phenomenon and only derivatively a linguistic one. By underlining the gap between sentence meaning and speaker’s meaning, he made it possible, of course, for ideal language philosophers to ignore many context-dependent features of speaker’s meaning that ordinary language philosophers had used as evidence against formal approaches. However, far from claiming that linguistic meaning was the only type of meaning amenable to scientific treatment and worthy of philosophical attention, he suggested that speaker’s meaning was relevant to philosophy and could be properly studied in its own right. As pragmatics has developed, it has become increasingly clear that the gap between sentence meaning and speaker’s meaning is wider than Grice himself thought, and that pragmatic inference contributes not only to implicit content but also to truth-conditional aspects of explicit content. While the effect may be to remove from linguistic semantics more phenomena than some semanticists might be willing to relinquish, it does not make the field any less challenging: in fact, the semantics-pragmatics interface becomes an interesting interdisciplinary area of research in its own right. However, as the gap between sentence meaning and speaker’s meaning widens, it increasingly brings into question a basic assumption of much philosophy of language, that the semantics of sentences provides straightforward, direct access to the structure of human thoughts. We have argued that linguistic meanings are mental representations that play a role at an intermediate stage in the comprehension process. Unlike speaker’s meanings (which they resemble in the way a skeleton resembles a body), linguistic meanings are not consciously entertained. In other words, whereas speakers’ meanings are salient objects in personal psychology, linguistic meanings only play a role in sub-personal cognition.

Within pragmatics itself, there is a tension between more linguistically-oriented and more cognitively-oriented approaches. By idealising away from properties of the context that are hard to formalise, and focusing on aspects of interpretation (e.g. ‘presuppositions’ or ‘generalised implicatures’) which exhibit a kind of code-like regularity, it is possible to extend the methods of formal semantics to a sub-part of the pragmatic domain (assuming that these phenomena are genuinely pragmatic, which is in some cases contentious) (Kadmon 2001; Blutner & Zeevat 2003). Good or bad, the resulting analyses are unlikely to generalise to the whole domain of pragmatics. The cognitive approach, and in particular relevance theory (on which we have focused here), approaches verbal comprehension as a psychological process. The challenge is precisely to explain how the closed formal system of language provides effective pieces of evidence which, combined with further evidence from an open and dynamic context, enable hearers to infer speakers’ meanings. The methods to be used are those of cognitive psychology, including modelling of cognitive processes, experimental tests, studies of communication pathologies (e.g. autism), and evolutionary insights. Pragmatics so conceived is relevant to linguistics because of the light it throws on the semantics-pragmatics interface. Its main relevance is to cognitive psychology, and in particular to the study of mind-reading and inference mechanisms. Its implications for the philosophy of language are largely cautionary and deflationary, amounting mainly to downplaying the philosophical significance of linguistic meanings. Its main philosophical relevance is to philosophy of mind. In particular, by describing comprehension, a very common, easy, everyday process, as a form of richly context-dependent inference, pragmatics provides an illustration of how to approach central cognitive processes, which, precisely because of their context-dependence, have been treated by Fodor as a major mystery for cognitive psychology and philosophy of mind.

References

Anscombre, Jean-Claude & Ducrot, Oswald. 1983. L’argumentation dans la langue. Mardaga:,Brussels.

Asher, Nicholas & Lascarides, Alex. 1995. Lexical disambiguation in a discourse context. Journal of Semantics 12: 69-108.

Asher, Nicholas & Lascarides, Alex. 1998. The semantics and pragmatics of presupposition. Journal of Semantics 15 : 239-300.

Asher, Nicholas & Lascarides, Alex. 2003. Logics of Conversation. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Atlas, Jay. 2004. Presupposition. In Horn & Ward 2004: 29-52.

Atlas, Jay. 2005. Logic, Meaning, and Conversation: Semantical Underdeterminacy, Implicature, And Their Interface. Oxford University Press, Oxford.

Bach, Kent. 1987. On communicative intentions: A reply to Recanati. Mind & Language 2: 141-54.

Bach, Kent. 1994. Conversational impliciture. Mind and Language 9: 124-62.

Bach, Kent. 1999. The myth of conventional implicature. Linguistics & Philosophy 22: 327-66.

Bach, Kent. 2001. You don’t say? Synthese 127: 11-31.

Bach, Kent. 2004. Pragmatics and the philosophy of language. In Horn & Ward 2004: 461-87.

Bach, Kent & Harnish, Robert Michael. 1979. Linguistic Communication and Speech Acts. MIT Press, Cambridge MA.

Bezuidenhout, Anne & Morris, Robin. 2004. Implicature, relevance and default inferences. In Dan Sperber & Ira Noveck (eds.) Experimental Pragmatics. Palgrave Press, London.

Blakemore, Diane. 1987. Semantic Constraints on Relevance. Blackwell, Oxford.

Blakemore, Diane. 2002. Linguistic Meaning and Relevance: The Semantics and Pragmatics of Discourse Markers. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Blutner, Reinhard & Zeevat, Henk. 2003. Optimality Theory and Pragmatics. Palgrave, London

Breheny, Richard, Katsos, Napoleon & Williams, John. 2004.. An online investigation into definiteness in implicature generations. RCEAL, Cambridge.

Bruxelles, Sylvie, Ducrot, Oswald & Raccah, Pierre-Yves. 1995. Argumentation and the lexical topical fields. Journal of Pragmatics 24: 99-114.

Carston, Robyn. 1988. Implicature, explicature and truth-theoretic semantics. In Ruth Kempson (ed.) Mental Representation: The Interface between Language and Reality. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge: 155-81. Reprinted in Davis 1991: 33-51; Kasher (ed.) 1998, vol. IV: 464-479.

Carston. Robyn. 1995. Quantity maxims and generalised implicature. Lingua 96: 213-44.

Carston, Robyn. 1997. Enrichment and loosening: complementary processes in deriving the proposition expressed? Linguistische Berichte 8: 103-127.

Carston, Robyn. 1998. Informativeness, relevance and scalar implicature. In Robyn Carston & Seiji Uchida (eds) Relevance Theory: Applications and Implications. John Benjamins, Amsterdam: 179-236.

Carston, Robyn. 2000. Explicature and semantics. UCL Working Papers in Linguistics 12: 1-44. Reprinted in Stephen Davis & Brad Gillon (eds.) 2004. Semantics: A Reader. Oxford University Press, Oxford.

Carston, Robyn. 2002. Thoughts and Utterances: The Pragmatics of Explicit Communication. Blackwell, Oxford.

Chierchia, Gennaro, Crain, Stephen, Guasti, Maria Teresa, Gualmini, Andrea & Meroni, Luisa. 2001. The acquisition of disjunction: Evidence for a grammatical view of scalar implicatures. BUCLD 25 Proceedings: 157-68. Cascadilla Press, Somerville, MA.

Clark, Herbert H. 1977. Bridging. In Philip Johnson-Laird & Peter Wason (eds.) Thinking: Readings in Cognitive Science. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge: 411-20.

Clark, Herbert H. 1993. Arenas of Language Use. CSLI, Stanford, CA.

Clark, Herbert H. 1996. Using Language. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Dascal, Marcelo. 1981. Contextualism. In Herman Parret, Marina Sbisà & Jef Verschueren (eds.) Possibilities and Limitations of Pragmatics. John Benjamins, Amsterdam.

Davis, Steven (ed.). 1991. Pragmatics: A Reader. Oxford University Press, Oxford.

Ducrot, Oswald. 1984. Le Dire et le Dit. Minuit, Paris.

Fauconnier, Gilles. 1975. Pragmatic scales and logical structure. Linguistic Inquiry 6: 353-75.

Fauconnier, Gilles. 1985. Mental Spaces: Aspects of Meaning Construction in Natural Language. MIT Press/Bradford Books, Cambridge, MA.

Fauconnier, Gilles. 1997. Mappings in Thought and Language. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Gazdar, Gerald. 1979. Pragmatics: Implicature, Presupposition and Logical Form. Academic Press, London.

Gibbs, Ray. 1994. The Poetics of Mind: Figurative Thought, Language and Understanding. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Glucksberg, Sam. 2001. Understanding Figurative Language. Oxford University Press, Oxford.

Green, Mitchell. 1995. Quantity, volubility, and some varieties of discourse. Linguistics and Philosophy 19: 83-112.

Grice, H. Paul. 1957. Meaning. Philosophical Review 66: 377-388. Reprinted in H. P. Grice 1989: 213-223.

Grice, H. Paul. 1967. Logic and Conversation. William James Lectures. Published in H. P. Grice 1989: 3-143.

Grice, H. Paul. 1981. Presupposition and conversational implicature. In Peter Cole (ed.) Radical Pragmatics. Academic Press, New York: 183-198. Reprinted in Grice 1989: 269-82.

Grice, H. Paul. 1982. Meaning revisited. In Neil Smith (ed.) Mutual Knowledge. Academic Press, London: 223-43. Reprinted in Grice 1989: 283-303.

Grice, H. Paul. 1989. Studies in the Way of Words. Harvard University Press, Cambridge MA.

Gross, Steven. 2001. Essays on Linguistic Context-Sensitivity and its Philosophical Significance. Routledge, London.

Hall, Alison. 2004. The meaning of ‘but’: A procedural reanalysis. To appear in UCL Working Papers in Linguistics 16: 199-236.

Harnish, Robert Michael. 1976. Logical form and implicature. In T. Bever, J. Katz, & D.T. Langendoen (eds) An Integrated Theory of Linguistic Ability: 313-91. Crowell, New York. Reprinted in Davis 1991: 316-64.

Harnish, Robert Michael. 1994. Mood, meaning and speech acts. In Savas Tsohatzidis (ed.) Foundations of Speech-Act Theory: Philosophical and Linguistic Perspectives: 407-459. Routledge, London.

Hirschberg, Julia. 1991. A Theory of Scalar Implicature. Garland, New York.

Hobbs, Jerry. 1979. Coherence and coreference. Cognitive Science: 27-90.

Hobbs, Jerry. 1985. On the coherence and structure of discourse. CSLI Report 85-37. Menlo Park, California.

Hobbs, Jerry. 2004. Abduction in natural language understanding. In Horn & Ward: 724-741.

Hobbs, Jerry, Stickel, Mark, Appelt, Douglas & Martin, Paul 1993. Interpretation as abduction. Artificial Intelligence 63: 69-142.

Horn, Laurence. 1984. Towards a new taxonomy for pragmatic inference: Q- and R-based implicature. In D. Schiffrin (ed.) Meaning, Form, and Use in Context: 11-42. Georgetown University Press, Washington DC.

Horn, Laurence. 1989. A Natural History of Negation. University of Chicago Press, Chicago IL.

Horn, Laurence. 1992. The said and the unsaid. SALT II: Proceedings of the Second Conference on Semantics and Linguistic Theory: 163-202. Ohio State University Linguistics Department, Columbus OH.

Horn, Laurence. 1996. Presupposition and implicature. In Shalom Lappin (ed.) The Handbook of Contemporary Semantic Theory. Blackwell, Oxford: 299-320.

Horn, Laurence. 2000. From IF to IFF: Conditional perfection as pragmatic strengthening. Journal of Pragmatics 32: 289-326.

Horn, Laurence. 2004. Implicature. In Horn & Ward: 3-28.

Horn, Laurence. 2005. The Border wars: A neo-Gricean perspective. In Ken Turner & Klaus von Heusinger (eds.), Where Semantics Meets Pragmatics. Elsevier, Amsterdam.

Horn, Laurence & Ward, Gregory. 2004. The Handbook of Pragmatics. Blackwell, Oxford.

Ifantidou, Elly. 2001. Evidentials and Relevance. John Benjamins, Amsterdam.

Iten, Corinne. forthcoming. Linguistic Meaning, Truth Conditions and Relevance. Palgrave Press, London.

Jackson, Frank (ed.) 1991. Conditionals. Oxford University Press, Oxford.

Kadmon, Nirit. 2001. Formal Pragmatics: Semantics, Pragmatics, Presupposition and Focus. Blackwell, Oxford.

Karttunen, Lauri & Peters, Stanley. 1979. Conventional implicature. In Oh, Choon-Yu, & Dineen, David (eds.) Syntax & Semantics 11: Presupposition: 1-56. Academic Press, New York.

Kasher, Asa. 1976. Conversational maxims and rationality. In Asa Kasher (ed.) Language in Focus: Foundations, Methods and Systems. Reidel, Dordrecht: 197-211. Reprinted in Kasher 1998, vol. IV: 181-214.

Kasher, Asa. 1982. Gricean inference revisited. Philosophica 29: 25-44.

Kasher, Asa. 1984. Pragmatics and the modularity of mind. Journal of Pragmatics 8: 539-557. Revised version reprinted in: Davis 1991: 567-582.

Kasher, Asa (ed.). 1998. Pragmatics: Critical Concepts, vols I-V. Routledge, London.

Katz, Jerrold. 1977. Propositional Structure and Illocutionary force, New York: Crowell.

Lakoff, George. 1987. Women, Fire and Dangerous Things, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, IL.

Levinson, Stephen. 1983. Pragmatics. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Levinson, Stephen. 1987. Minimization and conversational inference. In Jef Verschueren & Marcella Bertuccelli-Papi (eds) The Pragmatic Perspective. John Benjamins, Amsterdam: 61-129.

Levinson, Stephen. 2000. Presumptive Meanings: The Theory of Generalized Conversational Implicature. MIT Press, Cambridge MA.

Lewis, David. 1979. Scorekeeping in a language game. Reprinted in David Lewis 1983. Philosophical Papers, vol. 1: 233-249. Oxford University Press, New York.

Lewis, David. 1983. Philosophical Papers, vol 1. Oxford University Press, New York.

Matsui, Tomoko. 2000. Bridging and Relevance. John Benjamins, Amsterdam.

Matsumoto, Yo. 1995. The conversational condition on Horn scales. Linguistics and Philosophy 18: 21-60.

Morris, Charles. 1938. Foundations of the Theory of Signs. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, IL.

Neale, Stephen.1990. Descriptions. MIT Press, Cambridge MA.

Neale, Stephen. 1992. Paul Grice and the philosophy of language. Linguistics and Philosophy 15: 509-59.

Neale, Stephen. 2004. This, that and the other. In Anne Bezuidenhout & Marga Reimer (eds). Descriptions and Beyond: An Interdisciplinary Collection of Essays on Definite and Indefinite Descriptions and Other Related Phenomena. Oxford University Press, Oxford.

Neale, Stephen. forthcoming. Linguistic Pragmatism. Oxford University Press, Oxford.

Noveck, Ira. 2001. When children are more logical than adults: Investigations of scalar implicature. Cognition 78: 165-188.

Noveck, Ira, Bianco, Maryse & Castry, Alain. 2001. The costs and benefits of metaphor. Metaphor and Symbol 16: 109-121.

Papafragou, Anna & Musolino, Julien. 2003. Scalar implicatures: Experiments at the semantics-pragmatics interface. Cognition 86: 253-282.

Recanati, François. 1986. On defining communicative intentions. Mind & Language 1: 213-242.

Recanati, François. 1987. Meaning and Force. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Recanati, François. 1989. The pragmatics of what is said. Mind & Language 4: 295-329. Reprinted in Davis 1991: 97-120.

Recanati, François. 1995. The alleged priority of literal interpretation. Cognitive Science 19: 207-32.

Recanati, François. 1998. Pragmatics. In Edward Craig (ed.) Routledge Encyclopaedia of Philosophy 7: 620-33.

Recanati, François. 2002. Unarticulated constituents. Linguistics and Philosophy 25: 299-345.

Recanati, François. 2004a. Literal Meaning. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Recanati, François. 2004b. Semantics and pragmatics. In Horn & Ward 2004: 442-462.

Sadock, Jerry. 2004. Speech acts. In Horn & Ward 2004: 53-73.

Salmon, Nathan. 1986. Frege’s Puzzle. MIT Press, Cambridge, MA.

Schiffer, Stephen. 1972. Meaning. Clarendon Press, Oxford.

Searle, John. 1969. Speech Acts. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Searle, John. 1975. Indirect Speech Acts. In Peter Cole & Jerry Morgan (eds) Syntax and Semantics 3: Speech Acts: 59-82. Academic Press, New York.

Searle, John. 1979. Expression and Meaning. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Searle, John. 1983. Intentionality. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Schiffer, Stephen. 1972. Meaning. Clarendon Press, Oxford.

Sperber, Dan & Noveck, Ira (eds). 2004. Experimental Pragmatics. Palgrave, London.

Sperber, Dan & Wilson, Deirdre. 1981. Irony and the use–mention distinction. In Peter Cole (ed.) Radical Pragmatics: 295-318. Academic Press, New York. Reprinted in Davis 1991: 550-63.

Sperber, Dan & Wilson, Deirdre. 1986. Relevance: Communication and Cognition. Blackwell, Oxford and Harvard University Press, Cambridge MA. (Second edition 1995. Blackwell, Oxford.)

Sperber, Dan & Wilson, Deirdre. 1990. Rhetoric and relevance. In John Bender & David Wellbery (eds) The Ends of Rhetoric: History, Theory, Practice: 140-56. Stanford University Press, Stanford CA: 140-56.

Sperber Dan & Wilson, Deirdre. 1995. Postface to the second edition of Relevance: Communication and Cognition. Blackwell, Oxford.

Sperber, Dan & Wilson, Deirdre. 1998a. The mapping between the mental and the public lexicon. In Peter Carruthers & Jill Boucher (eds.) Language and Thought: Interdisciplinary Themes. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge: 184-2000.

Sperber, Dan & Wilson, Deirdre. 1998b. Irony and relevance: A reply to Seto, Hamamoto and Yamanashi. In Robyn Carston & Seiji Uchida (eds.) Relevance Theory: Applications and Implications. John Benjamins, Amsterdam: 283-93.

Stalnaker, Robert. 1974. Pragmatic presuppositions. In Milton Munitz & Peter Unger (eds) Semantics and Philosophy. New York University Press, New York. Reprinted in Stalnaker 1999: 47-62.

Stalnaker, Robert. 1999. Context and Content: Essays on Intentionality in Speech and Thought. Oxford University Press, Oxford.

Stanley, Jason. 2000. Context and logical form. Linguistics & Philosophy 23: 391-434.

Stanley, Jason. 2002. Making it articulated. Mind & Language 17: 49-68.

Stanley, Jason & Szabó, Zoltan. 2000. On quantifier domain restriction. Mind & Language 15: 219-61.

Strawson, Peter. 1964. Intention and convention in speech acts. Philosophical Review 73: 439-60. Reprinted in John Searle (ed.) 1971. The Philosophy of Language. Oxford University Press, Oxford: 170-89.

Sweetser, Eve. 1990. From Etymology to Pragmatics: Metaphorical and Cultural Aspects of Semantic Structure. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Szabó, Zoltan (ed.) 2005. Semantics versus Pragmatics. Oxford University Press, Oxford.

Travis, Charles. 1975. Saying and Understanding. Blackwell, Oxford.

Travis, Charles. 2001. Unshadowed Thought: Representation in Thought and Language. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA.

Tsohatzidis, Savas (ed.) 1994. Foundations of Speech Act Theory: Philosophical and Linguistic Perspectives. Routledge, London.

Turner, Kenneth (ed). 1999. The Semantics–Pragmatics Interface from Different Points of View. Elsevier Science, Oxford.

van der Auwera, Johan. 1981. What do we Talk about When we Talk? Speculative Grammar and the Semantics and Pragmatics of Focus. John Benjamins, Amsterdam.

van der Auwera, Johan. 1985. Language and Logic. A Speculative and Condition-Theoretic Study. John Benjamins, Amsterdam.

van der Auwera, Johan. 1997. Conditional perfection. In A. Athanasiadou, A. & R. Dirven, R. (eds.) On Conditionals Again. John Benjamins, Amsterdam: 169-190.

Vanderveken, Daniel. 1990-91. Meaning and Speech Acts (2 vols). Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

van Rooy, Robert. 1999. Questioning to resolve decision problems. In P. Dekker (ed.) Proceedings of the Twelfth Amsterdam Colloquium. Amsterdam: ILLC.

Wharton, Tim. 2003. Interjections, language and the ‘showing/saying’ continuum. Pragmatics & Cognition 11: 39-91.

Wilson, Deirdre. 1975. Presuppositions and Non-Truth-Conditional Semantics. London: Academic Press. Reprinted by Gregg Revivals, Aldershot, 1991.

Wilson, Deirdre. 2003. Relevance and lexical pragmatics. Italian Journal of Linguistics/Rivista di Linguistica 15: 273-291.

Wilson, Deirdre & Matsui, Tomoko. 2000. Recent approaches to bridging: Truth, coherence, relevance. In J de Bustos Tovar, P. Charaudeau, J. Alconchel, S. Iglesias Recuero & C. Lopez Alonso (eds.) Lengua, Discurso, Texto, vol. 1: 103-132. Visor Libros, Madrid.

Wilson, Deirdre & Sperber, Dan. 1981. On Grice’s theory of conversation. In P. Werth (ed.) Conversation and Discourse. Croom Helm, London: 155-78. Reprinted in Kasher 1998, vol. 1V: 347-68.

Wilson, Deirdre & Sperber, Dan. 1988. Mood and the analysis of non-declarative sentences. In Jonathan Dancy, Julius Moravcsik & Christopher Taylor (eds) Human Agency: Language, Duty and Value. Stanford University Press, Stanford, CA: 77-101. Reprinted in Kasher 1998, vol. II: 262-89.

Wilson, Deirdre & Sperber, Dan. 1992. On verbal irony. Lingua 87: 53-76.

Wilson, Deirdre & Sperber, Dan. 1993. Linguistic form and relevance. Lingua 90: 1-25.

Wilson, Deirdre & Sperber, Dan. 2002. Truthfulness and relevance. Mind 111: 583-632.

Wilson, Deirdre & Sperber, Dan. 2004. Relevance theory. In Horn & Ward 2004: 607-632.

Notes

[1] In Grice’s original formulation, “‘[Speaker] meant something by x’ is (roughly) equivalent to ‘[Speaker] intended the utterance of x to produce some effect in an audience by means of the recognition of this intention’” (Grice 1957/89: 220). For discussion and reformulation, see Strawson (1964); Searle (1969, 1983); Schiffer (1972); Recanati (1986, 1987); Grice (1982); Sperber & Wilson (1986/95); Bach (1987); Neale (1992).

[2] The wording of this maxim (and perhaps of the supermaxim of Manner) is a nice illustration of Grice’s playfulness.

[3] In this chapter, we will focus on the recovery of explicit truth-conditional content and implicatures; for brief comments on the treatment of presupposition and illocutionary force, see section 6 and footnote 15.

[4] On generalised implicatures and the neo-Gricean approach, see Horn (1984, 1992, 2004, 2005); Levinson (1983, 1987, 2000); Hirschberg (1991); Carston (1995, 1998); Green (1995); Matsumoto (1995); Sperber & Wilson (1995).

[5] Grice himself does not seem to have seen the distinction between generalised and particularised implicatures as theoretically significant. For discussion, see Carston (1995, 1998, 2002); Sperber & Wilson (1995); for experimental evidence on default inference, see Noveck (2001); Chierchia et al. (2001); Bezuidenhout & Morris (2004); Papafragou & Musolino (2003); Breheny, Katsos & Williams (2004.); Sperber & Noveck (2004).

[6] On the saying-implicating distinction, see Carston (2002: chapter 2.2); Wilson & Sperber (2002: section 7); Recanati (2004a: chapter 1). For representative collections on the semantics-pragmatics distinction, see Turner (1999); Szabo (2005).

[7] Karttunen & Peters (1979) extend Grice’s notion to other non-truth-conditional items such as ‘even’. Blakemore (1987, 2002) and Bach (1999) criticise the notion of conventional implicature and offer alternative accounts; on non-truth-conditional meaning, see section 6.

[8] Hedges are necessary because Grice does occasionally suggest that what is said may go beyond the literal meaning. See his comments on “dictiveness without formality” in Grice (1989: 361).

[9] Decoding and inferential elaboration actually overlap in time as online comprehension proceeds, with components of the sentence providing input to elaboration as soon as they are decoded. Moreover, disambiguation, i.e. the selection of one of several decoding hypotheses, is typically affected by pragmatic elaboration.

[10] For accounts along these lines, see Sperber & Wilson (1986/95, 1998a); Carston (1988, 2002); Recanati (1989, 2004a); Wilson & Sperber (2002); Neale (2004, forthcoming). Alternative, more literalist accounts, have been defended in Stanley (2000, 2002); Stanley & Szabó (2000).

[11] We are considering here only what we call basic or first-level explicatures. We also claim that there are higher-level explicatures incorporating speech-act or propositional-attitude information; for comments, see section 6.

[12] For discussion of the relevance-theoretic account of explicatures and alternative views on the explicit-implicit distinction, see Bach (1994, 2004); Levinson (2000: 186-98); Horn (2004, 2005); Stanley (2000, 2002); see also Carston (2002: chapter 2.5); Recanati (2004a). Bach introduces a notion of ‘impliciture’, distinct from implicature, to cover those aspects of what is said that are not linguistically encoded. He rejects the notion of explicature on the ground that pragmatic inferences are cancellable and nothing cancellable can be explicit. By this criterion (on which the explicit-implicit distinction essentially reduces to the coding-inference or semantics-pragmatics distinction), not even disambiguation and reference assignment can contribute to explicit content, and the resulting notion falls well short of Grice’s notion of what is said.

[13] On the explicit-implicit distinction in relevance theory, see Sperber & Wilson (1986/95: chapter 4.2, 4.4); Carston (2002: chapter 2.3); Wilson & Sperber (2004). For a more detailed analysis of the mutual adjustment process for (6b), see Wilson & Sperber (2002, Table 1).

[14] Definite descriptions such as ‘the rent’ in (9b) have been treated in the pragmatic literature as cases of ‘bridging implicature’ (Clark 1977) and analysed using relevance theory by Matsui (2000), Wilson & Matsui (2000); Sperber & Noveck (2004).

[15] To the extent that pragmatic ‘presuppositions’ can be analysed as implicated (or accommodated) premises (cf. Grice 1981; Atlas 2004), the mutual adjustment process also sheds light on their derivation. On other types of ‘presuppositional’ effect, see Sperber & Wilson (1986/95: chapter 4, section 5) and section 6 below.

[16] Here we will consider metaphor and related phenomena. For analyses of irony and understatement, see Sperber & Wilson (1981, 1986: Chapter 4.7, 4.9, 1990; 1998b); Wilson & Sperber (1992).

[17] See e.g. Strawson (1964); Searle (1969, 1975); Katz (1977); Recanati (1987); Tsohatzidis (1994); Sadock (2004).

[18] See for example Stalnaker (1974); Wilson (1975); Gazdar (1979); Karttunen & Peters (1979); Grice (1981); Anscombre & Ducrot (1983), Sperber & Wilson (1986/95: chapter 4.5); Blakemore (1987, 2002); Wilson & Sperber (1993); Bruxelles, Ducrot & Raccah (1995); Horn (1996); Kadmon (2001); Atlas (2004); Hall (2004); Iten (forthcoming).

[19] For an account of interjections within this framework, see Wharton 2003.
الرجوع الى أعلى الصفحة اذهب الى الأسفل
 

Pragmatics part 02

استعرض الموضوع التالي استعرض الموضوع السابق الرجوع الى أعلى الصفحة 
صفحة 1 من اصل 1

 مواضيع مماثلة

-
» Pragmatics part 01
» How to write a literature review
» عن كتاب: Pragmatics
» lexical pragmatics
» ترجمة مصطلح pragmatics : تداولية أم تخاطب

صلاحيات هذا المنتدى:لاتستطيع الرد على المواضيع في هذا المنتدى
منتديات تخاطب: ملتقى الفلاسفة واللسانيين واللغويين والأدباء والمثقفين  :: اللغات الأجنبية :: اللسانيات الإنجليزية والأدب الإنجليزي-
تسجيل صفحاتك المفضلة في مواقع خارجية
تسجيل صفحاتك المفضلة في مواقع خارجية reddit      

قم بحفض و مشاطرة الرابط منتديات تخاطب: ملتقى الفلاسفة واللسانيين واللغويين والأدباء والمثقفين على موقع حفض الصفحات
أفضل 10 أعضاء في هذا الأسبوع
لا يوجد مستخدم


Pragmatics part 02 561574572

فانضموا إليها

Computer Hope
انضم للمعجبين بالمنتدى منذ 28/11/2012
سحابة الكلمات الدلالية
الخطاب البخاري النص بلال ظاهرة اسماعيل الأشياء محمد مدخل موقاي اللغة العربي التداولية كتاب النحو الحذف المعاصر ننجز قواعد العربية مجلة مبادئ على النقد اللسانيات الخيام


حقوق النشر محفوظة لمنتديات تخاطب
المشاركون في منتديات تخاطب وحدهم مسؤولون عن منشوراتهم ولا تتحمل الإدارة ولا المشرفون أي مسؤولية قانونية أوأخلاقية عما ينشر فيها

Powered by phpBB© 2010

©phpBB | الحصول على منتدى مجاني | العلم و المعرفة | اخر... | منتدى مجاني للدعم و المساعدة | التبليغ عن محتوى مخالف | ملفات تعريف الارتباط التابعة لجهات خارجية | آخر المواضيع