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El. knyga: Context, Cognition and Conditionals

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This book proposes a semantic theory of conditionals that can account for (i) the variability in usages that conditional sentences can be put; and (ii) both conditional sentences of the form ‘if p, q’ and those conditional thoughts that are expressed without using ‘if’. It presents theoretical arguments as well as empirical evidence from English and other languages in support of the thesis that an adequate study of conditionals has to go beyond an analysis of specific sentence forms or lexical items. The resulting perspective on conditionals is one in which conditionality is located at a higher level than that of the sentence; namely, at the level of thought. The author argues that it is only through adopting such a perspective, and with it, a commitment to context-dependent semantics, that we can successfully represent conditional utterances as they are used and understood by ordinary language users. It will be of interest to students and scholars working on the semantics of conditionals in the fields of linguistics (especially semantics and pragmatics) and philosophy of language.


1 Introduction
1(8)
References
7(2)
2 Conditional Sentences, Conditional Thoughts
9(48)
2.1 Conditionals and Logic
11(11)
2.2 Conditionals, Probabilities and Conditional Probabilities
22(11)
2.3 Using Context: Conditionals and Possible Worlds
33(8)
2.4 `The Story of a Syntactic Mistake': Rethinking the Role of `IP'
41(5)
2.5 Reflections on the Scope of Semantic Analysis
46(7)
References
53(4)
3 Biscuit Conditionals, Conditional Speech Acts and Speech-Act Conditionals
57(38)
3.1 Properties of Biscuit Conditionals
60(5)
3.2 Biscuit Conditionals at the Level of Speech Acts
65(8)
3.3 Metalinguistic Conditionals
73(7)
3.4 Speech Acts in the Antecedent
80(8)
3.5 Rethinking the Category of Biscuit Conditionals
88(4)
References
92(3)
4 Beyond the Conditional Sentence and Towards Cognitive Reality
95(28)
4.1 From Grice to Radical Contextualism
98(7)
4.2 Default Semantics: A Brief Introduction
105(7)
4.3 Conditionals and Default Interpretations
112(8)
References
120(3)
5 Hypothetical and Biscuit Conditionals: Redrawing the Boundary
123(64)
5.1 Dividing the Class of Hypothetical Conditionals
125(17)
5.2 A Classification of Biscuit Conditionals
142(13)
5.3 Conditionals on Two Dimensions: A Corpus Study
155(26)
5.4 A Two-Dimensional Classification of Conditional Sentences
181(2)
References
183(4)
6 In Search of Linguistic and Contextual Constraints on Primary Meanings
187(42)
6.1 Identifying the Communicative Role of the Antecedent
189(7)
6.2 From the Role of the Antecedent to the Primary Meaning
196(4)
6.3 Indicative and Subjunctive (Counterfactual) Conditionals
200(8)
6.4 Conditional Perfection
208(13)
6.5 Representing Conditional Utterances in Default Semantics
221(4)
References
225(4)
7 Towards a Pragmatic Category of Conditionals
229(26)
7.1 Pragmatic Criteria for Conditionality
231(5)
7.2 A Cross-Linguistic Perspective
236(3)
7.3 Conditionals Without `If'
239(11)
7.4 Conditionality: A Cognitive Universal?
250(2)
References
252(3)
8 Concluding Remarks: The Need for a Contextualist Outlook on the Study of Conditionals
255(6)
References
259(2)
References 261(12)
Index 273
Chi-Hé Elder is Lecturer in Linguistics in the School of Politics, Philosophy and Language and Communication Studies at the University of East Anglia, UK. Her research interests lie in the relationship between post-Gricean pragmatics and interactional pragmatics, with a particular focus on the semantics and pragmatics of conditionals.