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This book breaks new ground towards an understanding of the mental
processes involved in presupposition, the comprehension of
information taken for granted. Various psycholinguistic experiments
are discussed to support the idea that involved in ordinary
language comprehension are complex and demanding cognitive
processes. The author demonstrates that these processes exist not
only at the explicit level of an utterance but also at a deeper
level of computing, where the background information taken for
granted as already known and shared between interlocutors is
processed. The author shows that experimental research can suggest
new theoretical models for presupposition, thus this book will be
of interest to researchers and students of psycholinguistics, the
philosophy of language and experimental pragmatics.
This book discusses developments in the study of implicatures and
presuppositions, drawing on recent linguistic and psycholinguistic
literature. It provides original discussions of specific formal
aspects of the theoretical reconstruction of these phenomena. The
authors offer innovative experimental analyses in which crucial
processing questions are addressed, and new experimental
methodologies are introduced. The result is an advanced debate
featuring broad empirical coverage of the issues, as well as an
informed discussion of the connections between a Compositional
Semantics and a Pragmatic Theory of Implicit Communication, in
light of the empirical data coming from Experimental Semantics and
Pragmatics. This book will be a worthwhile read for those with
interests in both the formal and methodological aspects of these
arguments.
This book discusses developments in the study of implicatures and
presuppositions, drawing on recent linguistic and psycholinguistic
literature. It provides original discussions of specific formal
aspects of the theoretical reconstruction of these phenomena. The
authors offer innovative experimental analyses in which crucial
processing questions are addressed, and new experimental
methodologies are introduced. The result is an advanced debate
featuring broad empirical coverage of the issues, as well as an
informed discussion of the connections between a Compositional
Semantics and a Pragmatic Theory of Implicit Communication, in
light of the empirical data coming from Experimental Semantics and
Pragmatics. This book will be a worthwhile read for those with
interests in both the formal and methodological aspects of these
arguments.
This volume contains essays that explore explicit and implicit
communication through linguistic research. Taking as a framework
Paul Grice's theories on "what is said," the contributors explore a
number of areas, including: the boundary between semantics and
pragmatics; the concept of implicit communication; the idea of the
logical form of our assertions; the notion of conventional meaning;
the phenomenon of "deixis," which refers to when an utterance
require context in order to be understood fully; the treatment of
definite descriptions; and the different kinds of pragmatic
processes.
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