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Ten leading scholars provide exacting research results and a
reliable and accessible introduction to the new field of optimality
theoretic pragmatics. The book includes a general introduction that
overviews the foundations of this new research paradigm. The book
is intended to satisfy the needs of students and professional
researchers interested in pragmatics and optimality theory, and
will be of particular interest to those exploring the interfaces of
formal pragmatics with grammar, semantics, philosophy of language,
information theory and cognitive psychology.
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Pragmatics (Hardcover)
N. Burton-Roberts; Contributions by Jay David Atlas, Kent Bach, Herman Cappelen, Ira A. Noveck, …
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R1,412
Discovery Miles 14 120
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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This contribution to Palgrave's 'Advances' series addresses a wide
range of issues that have arisen in post-Gricean pragmatic theory,
in chapters by distinguished authors. Among the specific topics
covered are scalar implicatures, lexical semantics and pragmatics,
indexicality, procedural meaning, the semantics and pragmatics of
negation. The volume includes both defences and critiques of
Relevance Theory and of Neo-Gricean Pragmatics.
Many linguists and philosophers of language explain linguistic
meaning in terms of truth conditions. This book focuses on the
meanings of expressions that escape such truth-conditional
treatment, in particular the concessives: "but," "even if," and
"although." Corinne Iten proposes semantic analyses of these
expressions based on the cognitive framework of relevance theory. A
thoroughly cognitive approach to linguistic meaning is presented in
which linguistic forms are seen as mapping onto mental entities,
rather than individuals and properties in the real world.
Researchers and advanced students in pragmatics will find this
account lucid, clear and accessible.
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Pragmatics (Paperback)
N. Burton-Roberts; Contributions by Jay David Atlas, Kent Bach, Herman Cappelen, Ira A. Noveck, …
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R1,390
Discovery Miles 13 900
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
|
This contribution to Palgrave's 'Advances' series addresses a wide
range of issues that have arisen in post-Gricean pragmatic theory,
in chapters by distinguished authors. Among the specific topics
covered are scalar implicatures, lexical semantics and pragmatics,
indexicality, procedural meaning, the semantics and pragmatics of
negation. The volume includes both defences and critiques of
Relevance Theory and of Neo-Gricean Pragmatics.
The main argument of this book is that the notion of truth plays no
role in speaker-hearers' interpretation of linguistic utterances
and that it is not needed for theoretical accounts of linguistic
meaning either. The theoretical argument is developed in the first
part, while the second part supports it with cognitive
relevance-theoretic, rather than truth-based, analyses of the
'concessive' expressions but, although and even if .
Ten leading scholars provide exacting research results and a
reliable and accessible introduction to the new field of optimality
theoretic pragmatics. The book includes a general introduction that
overviews the foundations of this new research paradigm. The book
is intended to satisfy the needs of students and professional
researchers interested in pragmatics and optimality theory, and
will be of particular interest to those exploring the interfaces of
formal pragmatics with grammar, semantics, philosophy of language,
information theory and cognitive psychology.
An original view of the problems of reference and singular terms, including a novel account of singular thought, a systematic application of recent work in the theory of speech acts, and a partial revival of Russell's analysis of singular terms.
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