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2011 | 7 | 2 | 205-222

Article title

Presuppositions and Appropriateness of Assertions

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
In this paper I aim to compare and evaluate two theoretic approaches to pragmatic presuppositions: the Common Ground account and Propositional Context account. According to the Common Ground account proposed by Stalnaker (2002), it is appropriate to assert a sentence p that requires a presupposition q only if q is mutually believed as accepted as true and taken for granted by the interlocutors. Otherwise, Gauker (2002, 2008) claims that the ground of propositions taken for granted coincides with what he calls the objective propositional context, that is the set of objectively relevant propositional elements that speakers ought to share in order to evaluate the appropriateness of utterances so as to reach the goal of a conversation.The main purpose of my paper is to show that, according to the Propositional Context account, a theory of presupposition has to take into account a normative-objective notion of context. Secondly, I aim to develop a criticism of Gauker's point of view claiming that the Propositional Context account does not account for the number of ways in which a proposition can be taken for granted by the speakers depending on the context. Finally, I propose to integrate Gauker's account with a further condition for appropriateness of assertion which states that: in order to appropriately assert a sentence p that requires a presupposition q, speakers ought to recognize how they should justify q in a specific communicative context.

Publisher

Year

Volume

7

Issue

2

Pages

205-222

Physical description

Dates

published
2011-01-01
online
2012-01-05

Contributors

  • University of Genoa

References

  • Annis, David. 1978. A Contextualist Theory of epistemic Justification. American Philosophical Quarterly 15: 213-229.
  • Asher, Nicholas. 1999. Discourse structure and the logic of conversation. In: Ken Turner (ed.), The Semantic/Pragmatic Interface from Different Points of View. Oxford: Elsevier, 19-48.
  • Beaver, David and Zeevat, Henk, 2007. Accommodation. In: Gillian Ramchand and Charles Reiss (eds.), Oxford Handbook of Linguistic Interfaces, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 533-538.
  • DeRose, Keith, 1999. Contextualism: An Explanation and Defense. In: John Greco and Ernest Sosa (eds.), The Blackwell Guide to Epistemology, Oxford: Blackwell, 187-205.
  • Ducrot, Oswald, 1972. Dire et ne pas dire. Paris, Hermann.
  • Gauker, Christopher. 1994. Thinking out loud. An essay on the relation between language and thought. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
  • Gauker, Christopher. 1998. What is a context of utterance?. Philosophical Studies 91: 149-172.[Crossref]
  • Gauker, Christopher. 2002. Words Without Meaning. Cambridge: MIT Press.
  • Gauker, Christopher. 2008. Against accommodation: Heim, van der Sandt, and the presupposition projection problem. Philosophy of Language, 22: 171-205.
  • Gu, Yueguo. 1999. Towards a model of situated discourse analysis. In: Ken Turner (ed.), The Semantics/Pragmatics Interface from Different Points of View. Oxford: Elsevier, 149-178.
  • Heim, Irene 1992. Presupposition Projection and the Semantics of Attitude Verbs. Journal of Semantics 9:183-221.[Crossref]
  • Karttunnen, Lauri 1974. Presupposition and linguistic context. Theoretical Linguistics 1: 181-194.
  • Lumsden, David 2008. Kinds of conversational cooperation. Journal of Pragmatics 40: 1896-1908.[Crossref][WoS]
  • Penco, Carlo. 2008. Context and Contract. In: Paolo Bouquet, Luciano Serafini and Richmond H. Thomason, (eds.), Perspectives on Contexts, Stanford: CSLI Publications, 187-211.
  • Sbisà, Marina. 1999. Ideology and persuasive presuppositions. In: Jef Verschueren (ed.), Language and Ideology. Selected paper from the 6th International Pragmatic Conference, vol. 1, International Pragmatic Association, Antwerp, 492-509.
  • Sbisà, Marina. 2002. Presupposizioni e contesti. In: Carlo Penco (ed.), La svolta contestuale, Milano: McGraw-Hill, 221-239.
  • Soames, Scott 1982. How presuppositions are inherited. A solution to the projection problem. Linguistic Inquiry 13: 483-545.
  • Sosa, Ernest and Enrique Villanueva. 2000 (eds.). Skepticism. Philosophical Issues 10, Oxford: Blackwell.
  • Stalnaker, Robert. 1974. Pragmatic Presuppositions. In: Milton K. Munitz and Peter K. Unger (eds.), Semantics and Philosophy, New York: New York University Press, 197-213.
  • Stalnaker, Robert. 1999. Context and Content. Oxford University Press, Oxford.
  • Stalnaker, Robert. 2002. Common Ground. Linguistics and Philosophy 25(5-6): 701-721.[Crossref][WoS]
  • Stalnaker, Robert. 2009. A response to Abbott on presupposition and common ground. Linguistics and Philosophy 31: 539-544.[WoS]
  • Thomason, Richmond. 1990. Accommodation, Meaning, and Implicature: Interdisciplinary Foundations for Pragmatics. In: Phillip R. Cohen, Jerry Morgan, and Martha E. Pollack (eds.), Intentions in Communication, Cambridge, 325-363.
  • von Fintel, Kai, 2000. What is presupposition accommodation?. URL
  • von Fintel, Kai, 2004. Would You Believe It, The King of France is Back. In: Anne Bezuidenhout and Marga Reimer (eds.), Descriptions and Beyond, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 315-341.
  • Yablo, Stephen. 2006. Non-Catastrophic Presupposition Failure. In: Judith Thomson and Alex Byrne (eds.), Content and Modality, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 164-180.

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.doi-10_2478_v10016-011-0011-8
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