ON THE SYNTAX AND SEMANTICS OF ASSERTION Questioning Speech Acts - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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ON THE SYNTAX AND SEMANTICS OF ASSERTION Questioning Speech Acts - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Dept. of Linguistics Swarthmore College ON THE SYNTAX AND SEMANTICS OF ASSERTION Questioning Speech Acts September 14, 2017 Peter Klecha the problem with epistemics a performative model assertions biscuits conclusion References THIS


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  • Dept. of Linguistics

Swarthmore College

ON THE SYNTAX AND SEMANTICS OF ASSERTION

Questioning Speech Acts September 14, 2017

Peter Klecha

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THIS TALK A collection of problems faced by various epistemic/doxastic expressions regarding how they integrate with standard theories of assertion

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THIS TALK

  • 1. the auxiliary must
  • 2. indicative conditionals
  • 3. the attitude think/believe

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THIS TALK My proposal: A theory which → treats illocutionary force as being determined by compositional semantics → treats assertions as a sort of imperative

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ROADMAP

  • 1. Some epistemic puzzles
  • 2. A performative model of meaning
  • 3. Puzzle 1
  • 4. Puzzle 2
  • 5. Puzzle 3

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THE PROBLEM WITH EPISTEMICS

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PROBLEM 1 Standard theories of assertion contend that the illocutionary efgect of an assertion of φ is to commit the speaker to a belief that φ is true (Lewis, 1975; Gunlogson, 2008; Lauer, 2013)

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PROBLEM 1 So (1a) can be paraphrased as (1b): (1) a. John lefu. b. I promise I think John lefu.

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PROBLEM 1 But if that’s true, (2a) and (2b) ought to be synonymous. (2) a. John lefu. b. I think John lefu.

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PROBLEM 1 Because (3a) and (3b) are (roughly) synonymous. (3) a. I promise I think John lefu. b. I promise I think I think John lefu.

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PROBLEM 1 Importantly I’m concerned with the contrast between (4a) and (4b-e) and all others, rather than (4a-d) and (4e). (4) a. John lefu. b. I firmly believe John lefu. c. I am sure John lefu. d. I am absolutely certain John lefu. e. I think John lefu.

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PROBLEM 1 (5) a. It’s common ground that C believes climate change is real. b. D/C: Climate change is not real. (hostile) b.’ D/C: I firmly believe climate change is not real. (not hostile)

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PROBLEM 2A The auxiliary must (also might) is standardly analyzed as an epistemic necessity (possibility) modal. (6) John must have gotten cookies. Thus, (6) is true ifg John has gotten cookies in all the epistemically accessible worlds.

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PROBLEM 2A But what exactly is this epistemic accessibility relation?

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POSSIBILITY 1 Is it the set of worlds consistent with the speaker’s belief? If so, utterances like (6) should be fairly unassailable, and should only be taken as comments on the speaker’s beliefs, not on the real world.

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POSSIBILITY 1 (7) a. A/B: Blofeld must be in Zurich. b. B/A: That’s not true! (8) a. A/B: I firmly believe Blofeld is in Zurich. b. B/A: That’s not true!

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POSSIBILITY 2 Is it the set of worlds consistent with our mutual beliefs? (i.e., the common ground?) If so, utterances like (8) should never be meaningful, since they can only recapitulate information that is already known.

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PROBLEM 2A The issue in essence is that, when it comes to must-sentences, what seems to be asserted is just the prejacent of must, not the sentence as a whole

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PROBLEM 2A This difgiculty has led some to embrace relativist/contextualist approaches like assessment sensitivity (e.g., Lasersohn, 2005, MacFarlane 2004), and others to simply deny that must is really a modal at all.

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PROBLEM 2B The same problem recurs with the epistemic necessity modal posited by Kratzer (1986) for indicative conditionals

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PROBLEM 2B Kratzer argues that if-clauses are restrictors

  • n the domains of modals

(9) a. If John goes to the store he should buy cookies. b. should [ If ... ] [ he buys cookies ]

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PROBLEM 2B This requires positing a silent modal in (10): (10) If John went to the store, he bought cookies.

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PROBLEM 2B (11) a. If John went to the store he bought cookies. b. [ If ... ] [ J bought cookies ] (12) a. If John goes to the store he should buy cookies. b. should [ If ... ] [ he buys cookies ] b’. [ If ... ] ( should [ ] [ h b c ] )

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PROBLEM 2B The modal has been argued to be an epistemic modal, in which case the same problem arises And the same solution: Assessment sensitivity (Stephenson, 2007) Again the question is: What exactly is being asserted?

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PROBLEM 3 Indicative conditionals have biscuity readings: (13) If you’re hungry, John bought cookies.

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PROBLEM 3 There is an inference that the relevance of the consequent depends on the truth of the antecedent And here what seems to be asserted is just the prejacent (unconditionally)

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THIS TALK My proposal: A theory which → treats illocutionary force as being determined by compositional semantics → treats assertion in particular as a species of imperative

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A PERFORMATIVE MODEL

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MY MODEL All sentences denote propositions (type ⟨s, t⟩) A single static update rule, identical to Stalnaker’s (1984) model of assertion: (14) CGn + S = CGn+1 = CGn ∩ S

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PERFORMATIVES Works when performatives like (15) are modeled simply as the classical propositions they seem to denote (15) a. I promise to go. b. I sentence you to 50 days in jail. c. I apologize.

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CONSTATIVES For everything else, we need a version of the Performative Hypothesis (Ross, 1970; Lakofg, 1968; McCawley, 1968; Sadock, 1969a,b) The illocutionary force of any given sentence is determined by its content

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IMPERATIVES A la Kaufmann (2012): (16) a. Go! b. I [ ⟨you⟩ go ] c. (a) = λw[□1,wλu[∃e[go(e, u) & Ag(e, 2, u)]]]

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IMPERATIVES Kaufmann-style paraphrase of (16a): (17) According to me, you should go. Lauer-style 2013 paraphrase of (17a): (18) I want you to go.

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PRAGMATICS Grice’s maxims exist as universal conventions guiding speech acts: All speakers are always committed to acting cooperatively, i.e.: All speakers are by default committed to trying to get x to do a ifg x doing a would help to advance x’s/our interests

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ASSERTIONS

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ASSERTIONS I treat asserting-declaratives as a special case of imperative: (19) a. John lefu. b. [ I [ BEL [ John lefu ] ] ] ]

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NOT SO CRAZY! (20) a. We’re gonna build that wall, believe me. b. Believe me when I tell you that I would never do you no harm. c. Know this: I will find you and I will kill you.

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ASSERTIONS So uttering (20a) is kind of like uttering (21a)

  • r (21b):

(21) a. According to me, you should believe that John lefu. b. I want you to think John lefu.

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ASSERTIONS What’s not negotiable is that the speaker made the assertion (i.e., publicly put pressure on the hearer to believe φ) What’s still negotiable is whether φ is really true

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ASSERTIONS So on this theory the semantics of assertion commits the hearer to believe φ rather than the speaker

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ASSERTIONS But the convention of honesty presumably still means that the speaker ends up committed to φ too (Grice, 1975) (All speakers are by default committed to not trying to get anyone to believe anything that they don’t themselves believe)

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ASSERTIONS This captures the intuition (Grice, 1957) that the point of an assertion is to get people to believe things (NB: Assessment sensitivity faces some serious problems from this perspective)

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ASSERTIONS The standard theory says the assertions commit the speaker to believe φ, which while indirectly useful, isn’t the main point

  • f most assertions

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ASSERTIONS Of course, the proponent of the speaker-commitment view might say: Pragmatics is responsible for the hearer-oriented efgect (if any?)

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ASSERTIONS The main empirical advantage concerns Problem 1: (22) a. John lefu. b. I think John lefu.

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ASSERTIONS Per speaker commitment: (23) a. I promise I think John lefu. b. I promise I think I think John lefu.

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ASSERTIONS Per my proposal: (24) a. I want you to think John lefu. b. I want you to think I think John lefu.

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SEMANTICS OF ASSERTION So, the semantics I propose for assertion handles Problem 1. NB the syntax I propose is irrelevant to Problem 1 and logically distinct from the semantics.

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PROBLEM 2 Problem 2 is solved because it allows us to treat must and Kratzer’s as being outside the scope of the assertion; i.e., as being (part

  • f) the assertion operator themselves

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BACK TO PROBLEM 1 So in the case of must we can treat it as being in complementary distribution with BEL (25) a. Joe must have lefu. b. I [ must [ Joe lefu ] ]

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BACK TO PROBLEM 1 And in the case of we can treat it as being BEL In indicative conditionals, it is the modal BEL that is restricted by the conditional

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BACK TO PROBLEM 1 (26) a. If John went to the store he bought cookies. b. I [ BEL [ If ... ] [ John bought cookies ] ]

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BACK TO PROBLEM 1 Thus both epistemic modals don’t behave like they’re part of the assertion because they’re not: What’s asserted (and therefore what is at issue for the purpose of truth value judgments etc.) is the prejacent of those modals

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BISCUITS

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BISCUITS (e.g., DeRose and Grandy (1999); Franke (2007)) (27) If you’re hungry, John bought cookies. a. John bought cookies. b. If you’re hungry, (27a) is relevant.

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BISCUITS Because there are two modal operators in an assertion, there are two places the if-clause can restrict: [ I [ BEL [ John lefu ] ] ]

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BISCUITS Normal conditionals arise from restriction of BEL Biscuit conditionals arise from restriction of I

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BISCUITS (28) If John went to the store, he bought cookies. a. I want you to believe that if John went to the store, he bought cookies. b. (If he didn’t go to the store, he didn’t buy cookies.)

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BISCUITS (29) If you’re hungry, John bought cookies. a. If you’re hungry, I want you to believe that John bought cookies. b. (If you’re not hungry, I don’t have any desire for you to believe John bought cookies.)

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BISCUITS The convention of honesty guarantees that the speaker believes the consequent of a biscuit conditional no matter what (and thus that the hearer will typically infer the consequent no matter what)

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BISCUITS The convention of relevance guarantees the relevance inference: The speaker should

  • nly commit the hearer to take action x if

the hearer doing x is relevant to his/our interests

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CONCLUSION

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CONCLUSION Going syntactic solves problem 2 Going imperative solves problem 1 Doing both gets biscuits

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DeRose, K. and R. E. Grandy (1999, September). Conditional assertions and “biscuit” conditionals. Noûs 33(3), 405–420. Franke, M. (2007). The pragmatics of biscuit conditionals. In Proceedings of the 16th Amsterdam Colloquium. Grice, H. P. (1957, July). Meaning. The Philosophical Review 66(3), 377–388. Grice, H. P. (1975). Logic and conversation. In P. Cole and J. Morgan (Eds.), Syntax and Smeantics 3: Speech Acts, pp. 41–58. New York: Academic Press. Gunlogson, C. (2008). A question of commitment. Belgian Journal of Linguistics 22(1), 101–136. Kaufmann, M. (2012). Interpreting imperatives. Springer. Kratzer, A. (1986). Conditionals. Proceedings of CLS 22(2), 1–15. Lakofg, R. (1968). Abstract syntax and Latin complementation. MIT Press. Lasersohn, P. (2005). Context dependence, disagreement, and predicates of personal taste. Linguistics and Philosophy 28, 643–686.

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Lauer, S. (2013). Towards a Dynamic Pragmatics. Ph. D. thesis, Stanford University. Lewis, D. (1975). Languages and language. In K. Gunderson (Ed.), Language, Mind, and Knowledge, pp. 3–35. University of Minnesota Press. McCawley, J. D. (1968). The role of semantics in grammar. In E. Bach and R. T. Harms (Eds.), Universals in linguistic theory, pp. 125–170. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston. Ross, J. R. (1970). On declarative sentences. In Readings in English transformational grammar, pp. 222–272. Waltham, MA: Ginn. Sadock, J. (1969a). Hypersentences. Papers in Linguistics 1, 283–371. Sadock, J. (1969b). Super-hypersentences. Papers in Linguistics 1, 1–16. Stalnaker, R. (1984). Inquiry. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. Stephenson, T. (2007). Indicative conditionals have relative truth conditions. In Proceedings of CLS 43, pp. 231–242.

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