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This volume provides new insights on lying and (intentionally)
misleading in and out of the courtroom, a timely topic for
scholarship and society. Not all deceptive statements are lies; not
every lie under oath amounts to perjury-but what are the relevant
criteria? Taxonomies of falsehood based on illocutionary force,
utterance context and speakers' intentions have been debated by
linguists, moral philosophers, social psychologists and cognitive
scientists. Legal scholars have examined the boundary between
actual perjury and garden-variety lies. The fourteen previously
unpublished essays in this book apply theoretical and empirical
tools to delineate the landscape of falsehood, half-truth, perjury,
and verbal manipulation, including puffery, bluffing, and bullshit.
The papers in this collection address conceptual and ethical
aspects of lying vs. misleading and the correlation of this
opposition with the Gricean pragmatic distinction between what is
said and what is implicated. The questions of truth and lies
addressed in this volume have long engaged the attention of
scholars in linguistics, philosophy, psychology, cognitive science,
organizational research, and the law, and researchers from all
these fields will find this book of interest.
This book provides a detailed exploration of negation and negative polarity phenomena and their implications for linguistic theory. Including new, specially commissioned work from some of the leading European, American, and Japanese scholars, Negation and Polarity covers all of the main approaches to this subjectDSsyntactic, pragmatic, semantic, and cognitiveDSin a variety of language contexts.
The papers in this volume reflect current trends in international
research in pragmatics over recent years. The unique feature of the
book is that the authors coming from ten different countries
represent all aspects of pragmatics and address issues that have
emerged as the result of recent research in pragmatics proper and
neighboring fields such as cognitive psychology, philosophy, and
communication. Recent theoretical work on the semantics/pragmatics
interface, empirical work within cognitive and developmental
psychology, intercultural communication and bilingual pragmatics
have directed attention to issues that warrant reexamination and
revision of some of the central tenets and claims of the field of
pragmatics. In addition, cultural changes originating from
globalization have affected the relation of language to the wider
world. In particular, the spread of English as a global language
has led to the emergence of issues of usage, power, and control
that must be dealt with in a comprehensive pragmatics of language.
Pragmatic theories have traditionally emphasized the importance of
intention, rationality, cooperation, common ground, mutual
knowledge, relevance, and commitment in the formation and execution
of communicative acts. The new approaches to pragmatic research
reflected in this volume, while not questioning the central role of
these factors, extend the purview of the discipline to allow for a
more comprehensive picture of their functioning and
interrelationship within the dynamics of communication. The papers
address these issues from a variety of directions. In Part I,
Searle and Horn examine language use and pragmatics from a
philosophical perspective. In Part II, the cognitive aspect of
pragmatics is represented in the papers of Moeschler, Ruiz de
Mendoza & Baicchi, and Giora. They focus on well-known domains
such as illocutionary constructions, the pragmatics of negation,
and the relevance-theoretic concept of explicature. However, each
paper sheds new light on the familiar concepts. The papers in Part
III by Mey, Kecskes and Grundy discuss the intercultural aspects of
pragmatics while Terkourafi explores the explanatory potential of
an interpretation of Grice's Cooperative Principle. Margerie's and
Geeraert & Kristiansen's articles focus on the application of
usage-based methodology in different ways within pragmatics.
Negation is a sine qua non of every human language but is absent
from otherwise complex systems of animal communication. In many
ways, it is negation that makes us human, imbuing us with the
capacity to deny, to contradict, to misrepresent, to lie, and to
convey irony. The apparent simplicity of logical negation as a
one-place operator that toggles truth and falsity belies the
intricate complexity of the expression of negation in natural
language. Not only do we find negative adverbs, verbs, copulas,
quantifiers, and affixes, but the interaction of negation with
other operators (including multiple iterations of negation itself)
can be exceedingly complex to describe, extending (as first
detailed by Otto Jespersen) to negative concord, negative
incorporation, and the widespread occurrence of negative polarity
items whose distribution is subject to principles of syntax,
semantics, and pragmatics. The chapters in this book survey the
patterning of negative utterances in natural languages, spanning
such foundational issues as how negative sentences are realized
cross-linguistically and how that realization tends to change over
time, how negation is acquired by children, how it is processed by
adults, and how its expression changes over time. Specific chapters
offer focused empirical studies of negative polarity, pleonastic
negation, and negative/quantifier scope interaction, as well as
detailed examinations of the form and function of sentential
negation in modern Romance languages and Classical Japanese.
This book provides a detailed exploration of negation and negative polarity phenomena and their implications for linguistic theory. Including new, specially commissioned work from some of the leading European, American, and Japanese scholars, Negation and Polarity covers all of the main approaches to this subjectDSsyntactic, pragmatic, semantic, and cognitiveDSin a variety of language contexts. It will appeal to general linguists at graduate level and above.
This book offers a unique synthesis of past and current work on the
structure, meaning, and use of negation and negative expressions, a
topic that has engaged thinkers from Aristotle and the Buddha to
Freud and Chomsky. Horn's masterful study melds a review of
scholarship in philosophy, psychology, and linguistics with
original research, providing a full picture of negation in natural
language and thought; this new edition adds a comprehensive preface
and bibliography, surveying research since the book's original
publication.
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