Pragmatics and Philosophy. Connections and Ramifications, 1st ed. 2019
Perspectives in Pragmatics, Philosophy & Psychology Series, Vol. 22

Language: English

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Pragmatics and Philosophy. Connections and Ramifications
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311 p. · 15.5x23.5 cm · Paperback

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Pragmatics and Philosophy. Connections and Ramifications
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This book shows how pragmatics and philosophy are interconnected, and explores the consequences and ramifications of this innovative idea, especially in addressing and solving the problem of breaking Grice's circle. The author applies philosophy in order to get to a better understanding of pragmatics, and pragmatics in order to get a better understanding of philosophy. The book starts with a chapter on the non-cancellability of explicatures and the role that this idea plays in the resolution of Grice?s circle, and proceeds with the discussion of other topics in which explicatures  or cancellability play an important and decisive role. While the reader proceeds in the reading of this book, they accumulate notions and pieces of knowledge which will be of invaluable use when arriving at the chapter on conversational presuppositions (and related chapters), where the author expresses his most radical views: namely that (potential) presuppositions are indeed cancellable, contrary to what many believe. 
Chapter 1. Introduction.- Chapter 2. On a theory-internal problem in the semantics/pragmatics debate: how to resolve Grice’s circle.- Chapter 3. On the nature of pragmatic increments at the truth-conditional level.- Chapter 4. On the tension between semantics and pragmatics.- Chapter 5. The pragmatics of referential and attributive expressions.- Chapter 6. The clitic ‘lo’ in Italian, propositional attitudes and presuppositions.- Chapter 7. Quotation with and without quotation marks.- Chapter 8. Knowing how and the semantics/pragmatics debate.- Chapter 9. Indirect reports and societal pragmatics.- Chapter 10. What happens when we report grammatical, lexical and morphological  errors?.- Chapter 11. Maier on the alleged transparency of mixed quotation.- Chapter 12. Conversational presuppositions. Presupposition as defeasible (and non-defeasible) inference.- Chapter 13. Presuppositions in indirect reporting.

Contributes highly original ideas on the problem of breaking Grice's circle, a topic that underlies the whole philosophy of language and linguistics

Offers a clear illustration of the problem, both at a theoretical level and in relation to distinct topics, such as explicatures and presuppositions applied to indirect reports

Presents an extraordinarily rich overview of the state of the art in the debate concerning the divide between semantics and pragmatics

Reviews an excitingly broad range of linguistic phenomena and provides detailed accounts of existing theoretical approaches