The study of those aspects
which do not seem to come
directly from the
compositional semantics
Context-dependent
meaning
Non-literal
Inferred meaning
Meaning minus semantics
Grice:
Lecture 14
KEY PROPOSAL
Distinction between what
is SAID (encoded directly)
and what is IMPLICATED
(meaning derived)
CO-OPERATIVE
PRINCIPLE
Verbal communication
is OSTENSIVE
Ostensive communication is
INTENDED in order to
co-operate with the principle
Social theory of communication:
pragmatic reasoning is derived
through social function
MAXIMS
& FLOUTS
QUALITY: Make your contribution true,
do not say what you believe to be false,
or what you lack evidence for
Flout: Speaker is not trying to make a truthful
contribution. Examples include IRONY, SARCASM, and
UNCERTAIN responses
QUANTITY: Give as much
information as is required & make
contributions efficiently informative
Flout: Speaker does not give the right amount
of information. Examples include SHORT
REFERENCES and UNINFORMATIVE responses
RELEVANCE: Make your
contributions relevant
MANNER: Avoid ambiguity
and obscurity, and be orderly
and precise.
Flout: Also similar for relevance,
speaker is purposefully being
ambiguous. Examples include
literary style and euphemisms
Flouts
Flouts are intentional violations of maxims,
and assuming Co-operative Principle is being
obeyed, the hearer assumes the speaker had
a good reason to violate.
When a flout is heard, it is assumed
the speaker is trying to
communicate something that is not
directly encoded, and this is a
conversational implicature
Stipulative & not embedded
in a psychologically plausible
theory of mind
The calculation of 'what is
said' does not involve
pragmatic inferencing
No criteria for
identifying the maxims,
and essential concepts
are left undefined
PROPOSAL
Analyse the maxims under
Relevance alone, intending to
communicate shows what we
have to say is relevant and
therefore worth the processing
effort
Continue to work --> Sufficient pay off
received. Work=processing info by
pragmatic inferencing, Pay off = 'positive
cognitive effects' & set of implicatures.
No pay off = effort wasted = Stimuli
considered not relevant
COGNITIVELY
PLAUSIBLE THEORY
Must model the role of
context and the role of
intention recognition
Based on Fodor (1983), the theory
should be COMPUTATIONAL,
SYMBOLIC, MODULAR & REALIST
PRINCIPLES OF RELEVANCE
INFERENTIAL model of communication =
linguistic info is only one source of evidence
for determining the interpretation; other
stimuli & info can also play a role
Warranted
strengthening
(propositions that
come with
strengths)
Revisions of existing
propositions
(changed with
incoming new info)
1. "Human cognition tends to
be geared to the maximisation
of relevance"
Human cognition is efficient because of
evolution. Evidence includes face recognition and
identifying speech sounds. It's possible that this
relates to specific brain modules.
2. "Every act of overt
communication conveys
a presumption of its own
optimal relevance"
The idea that what we
have to say is relevant
and worth processing.
Cognitive theory that
considers brain activity as
the key element in
deriving implicatures
Effects of co-operative
principle deduced from
general cognitive pressures
to derive useful stimulus
from the environment
Hearer-oriented
perspective
Implicatures:
Lectures 14, 15 & 21
CONVENTIONAL
Committing oneself to X being the case,
without actually saying something that
would be false if the implicatures was false
Distinguishes
between what the
speaker is
committed to and
what is actually true
Describe the non-truth-conditional
aspects of the meaning of certain
lexical items
Examples include the
COUNTER-EXPECTUAL aspect of 'but'
in 'She is poor but honest' and the
SEQUENTIAL aspect of 'and'
Triggers can consist of
presupposition triggers, which
indicates the overlap
Additive particles
like 'too'
Discourse
particles
Implicative
verbs like
'fail'/'manage'
Intonational
contours
CONVERSATIONAL
Inferences drawn on the basis of
the assumption of co-operation
Part of the inferred meaning,
NOT the encoded meaning
Meaning derived from the
inferences of flouts
SCALAR
Example: 'some' implies 'not all'
This part of the meaning
goes beyond what is directly
encoded, so it provides
additional meaning
Horn Scales (1972)
Horn proposes the Gricean analysis that scalar
implicatures are proposed on the basis of
co-operation and is avoiding violating as many
maxims as possible
Set of scale alternatives given by
conventional meaning of scalar
items.
<all, most, many, some>
If the scalar item appears in the scope of negation,
or other downward-entailing environment, the
scale REVERSES, so we use lower scale alternatives
Believes that individuals will differ in their
assessment of the scale relations because
they are lexically defined
Exclusivity Implicature
Sentences with disjunction of 'or', the truth table
states that both p+q could be true, but this meaning
is different to what we usually assign to or. We
usually assume that both is not an option for 'or'
Not truth-conditional meaning,
and so speakers can distance
themselves from them. This means
that they are CANCELLABLE.
Subset of inferences
Presuppositions:
Lectures 19-21
TRIGGERS
ASPECTUAL TRIGGERS:
aspectual predicates like
'continue'/'stop', attitude
predicates like
'regret'/'know'
SCALAR TRIGGERS:
words like 'even', imply
the likelyhood
IMPLICATIVE TRIGGERS:
words like 'fail'/'manage'
imply there was an
attempt
EVIDENTIAL TRIGGERS:
Modal 'must' implies
there is a lack of direct
evidence
KEY PROPERTIES
Not truth-conditional: the
propositions do not need to
be true to be presupposed
Backgrounded: Not the main
point of a proposition, but it is
assumed in the background.
Evidence: it's very hard to pick
out presuppositions & object to
them in discourse. This
distinguishes them from
conventional implicatures.
Projective: Preserved
under negation and other
operators, which do NOT
preserve entailment.
Antecedent of a
conditional
Yes/no questions
Under a
possibility
adverb
Under a
belief
predicate
Pluggable: Some predicates plug
presuppositions, meaning they stop
them being attributed to the speaker,
by projecting them out of the
embedded clause.
Uncancellable:
Presuppositions seem to
be cancellable, but
negation is difficult
Require dynamic accommodation:
Presuppositions impose a demand upon the
hearer to modify their context model,
especially if they weren't aware of the 'shared'
assumption.
Stalnaker (1974) modelled the
shared set of presuppositions as
THE COMMON GROUND -
presuppositions as pre-conditions
on common ground updates
Assertions: 'proposals to
update the common ground'
Presuppositions: 'conditions which need
to be met for updates to the common
ground to work'
Conditions for accommodation are
when we don't want to make a fuss/don't
necessarily care (SOCIAL ASSUMPTION)
Presuppositions can sometimes
be INFORMATIVE - possessives
give rise to the form 'X has Y'
FAILURE
The situation where an expression which
gives rise to a presupposition is used in a
situation where it is not met.
Example includes a failure to satisfy
the UNIQUENESS PRESUPPOSITION in
which definites seem to give rise to
We tend to make an effort to rectify the failure &
satisfy the presupposition conditions by considering
what the unique proposition could refer to
Explicatures:
Lecture 18
Sperber & Wilson use the term
'explicatures' to distinguish what is
said from what is merely encoded.
Used to describe the proposition which is
explicitly communicated by a given
utterance - the proposition we arrive at
once the context fills in the gap in the
encoded message
Developments of logical forms
which correspond to 'what is
said' in a RT framework
Pragmatic processes involved in deriving
explicatures include: disambiguation,
saturation (reference assignment), free
enrichment (adding unarticulated
constituents) and 'ad hoc concept
construction' (narrowing meaning)
Carston (2002): 'What
the speaker meant'
Situations where explicated
meaning is important include:
sequential and, where the idea
of 'and then' is meant
Instance where context is
important for communication
Ambiguous lexical items with double
meanings need to be modulated by the
context in order for us to process the
correct meaning. This is ultimately a matter
of REFERENCE ASSIGNMENT. Pragmatics is
required to enrich the proposition and fill
in the content
Filling in process primarily
involves associating parts of
grammatical representation
with entities in context
Example includes assigning reference to
pronouns, Some pronouns are referential,
such as 'Every boy thinks he is nice'. This is
known as a BOUND pronoun, and it has
VARIABLE REFERENCE
ANAPHORA
Deep: pronouns can be
filled in by anything
Surface: ellipsis must be filled
in by a linguistic antecedent