1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910511648203321

Titolo

Pragmatics, truth and underspecification : towards an atlas of meaning / / edited by Ken Turner, Laurence Horn

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Leiden ; ; Boston : , : Brill, , [2018]

©2018

ISBN

90-04-36544-3

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (422 pages)

Collana

Current Research in the Semantics/Pragmatics Interface ; ; Volume 34

Disciplina

401/.4

Soggetti

Semantics

Pragmatics

Electronic books.

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

An (abridged) atlas of negation: Polar landscape in an era of climate change / Larry Horn -- Dispelling the cloud of unknowing: More on the syntactic nature of neg raising / Chris Collins, Paul Postal -- Presuppositions, negation, and existence / Barbara Abbott -- More Ado about nothing: On the typology of negative indefinites / Johan van der Auwera, Lauren van Alsenoy -- Distinguishing ambiguity from underspecificity / Una Stojnic, Matthew Stone, Ernie Lepore -- Metaphor, minimalism, and semantic generality: Seeing things in context / Michiel Leezenberg -- A radically pragmatic account of number words and the reversibility of scales / Jerrold Sadock -- Utterances and expressions in semantics and logic / David Braun -- Grammar as procedures: Language, interaction, and the predictive turn / Ruth Kempson, Ronnie Cann -- Illusory inferences in a question-based theory of reasoning / Philipp Koralus, Salvador Mascarenhas -- A commitment-theoretic account of Moore's Paradox / Philipp Koralus, Salvador Mascarenhas -- Remarks on Davidson's polymorphous concept of truth and its role in a theory of meaning / Ken Turner.

Sommario/riassunto

The concept of meaning, since Frege initiated the linguistic turn in 1884, has been the subject of numerous theories, hypotheses, methodologies and distinctions. One distinction of considerable



strategic value relates to the location of meaning: some aspects of meaning can be found in language and are modelled with semantic values of various kinds; some aspects of meaning can be found in communicative processes and are modelled with pragmatic inferences of one sort or another. One hypothesis of great heuristic utility concerns the relationship that is assumed between the semantic and the pragmatic. This collection of especially commissioned papers examines current thinking on the plausible nature of the semantic, the possible character of the pragmatic and the mechanics of their intersection.