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Causality and Connectives: From Grice to relevance [Kõva köide]

(Aristotle University of Thessaloniki)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 206 pages, kõrgus x laius: 245x164 mm, kaal: 555 g
  • Sari: Pragmatics & Beyond New Series 216
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Jan-2012
  • Kirjastus: John Benjamins Publishing Co
  • ISBN-10: 9027256217
  • ISBN-13: 9789027256218
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 206 pages, kõrgus x laius: 245x164 mm, kaal: 555 g
  • Sari: Pragmatics & Beyond New Series 216
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Jan-2012
  • Kirjastus: John Benjamins Publishing Co
  • ISBN-10: 9027256217
  • ISBN-13: 9789027256218
Teised raamatud teemal:
The book explores finely-grained distinctions in causal meaning, mostly from a relevance-theoretic perspective. To increase the challenge of this double task, i.e. a thorough as well as satisfactory account of cause and a detailed assessment of the theoretical model employed to this end, the current study involves an investigation carried out by way of contrasting the prototypical causal exponents of Modern Greek subordination, i.e. epeidi and ?iati. In addition, this objective is achieved in the methodological framework of contrasting a range of contextual applications of the two connectives against their translated versions in English, realizable by means of because. Despite first impressions, a closer observation of the wide range of applications of these markers in the discourse of coherence relations illustrates divergences in their distribution, which, in turn, are taken to highlight differing aspects of causal interpretation. The proposal for the relevance-theoretic model emanates from a reaction to an array of problems undermining traditional tenets of pragmatic theory originating with Grice’s stance, but is also made in response to the common practice in pragmatic research (since its origin) to pay low regard for the contribution of typical causal markers to debates aiming at the determination of the distinction that has been instrumental to issues of cognition and pragmatic interpretation, i.e. propositional vs. non-propositional meaning.
Acknowledgements xi
Chapter 1 Causal expression: Communication, discourse and cognition
1(34)
1.1 Introduction
1(4)
1.2 Cohesion, coherence and relevance
5(27)
1.2.1 The functional approach
6(8)
1.2.2 Ethnography of communication
14(3)
1.2.3 The domain-oriented approach
17(2)
1.2.4 The psycholinguistic approach
19(8)
1.2.5 From the pragmatic to the cognitive pragmatic approach
27(5)
1.3 Causality and connectives
32(3)
Chapter 2 Causality and implicature
35(50)
2.1 Introduction
35(2)
2.2 Notion of implicature vs. notion of `what is said'
37(2)
2.3 Conversational implicature and the tests of detachability/cancellability
39(3)
2.4 Grice and causal connectives
42(2)
2.5 Particularized implicature and causal meaning
44(3)
2.6 Generalized implicature and causal meaning
47(3)
2.7 Conventional implicature and causal meaning
50(4)
2.8 Explanatory interpretation of because as a conventional implicature
54(4)
2.9 Inferential interpretation of because as a conventional implicature
58(2)
2.10 Cancelling causal meaning
60(1)
2.11 Detaching causal meaning
61(3)
2.12 A truth-conditional approach to causal conjunctions
64(5)
2.13 More problems with the Gricean framework: The notion of `saying
69(9)
2.13.1 Kent Bach's account
71(3)
2.13.2 Shortcomings of Bach's account
74(4)
2.14 More problems with the Gricean framework: The case of epeiδi and yiati
78(7)
Chapter 3 Introduction to Modern Greek causal connectives
85(12)
3.1 Introduction
85(1)
3.2 Tracing the history of the connectives
86(1)
3.3 A brief descriptive account
87(1)
3.4 Background building
87(5)
3.5 Corpus analysis
92(5)
Chapter 4 The Sweetserean approach: A critique
97(12)
4.1 The domain-oriented approach to causality
97(1)
4.2 The framework
97(3)
4.3 Causality
100(1)
4.4 The case of epeiδi and yiati
101(6)
4.4.1 Problems with the case of yiati
105(2)
4.5 Conclusion
107(2)
Chapter 5 Relevance theory
109(12)
5.1 Introduction to relevance
109(8)
5.1.1 Utterance interpretation
114(3)
5.2 Conceptual and procedural meaning
117(1)
5.3 Saying and implicating distinction
118(3)
Chapter 6 Causality and relevance
121(68)
6.1 Introduction to causality and relevance
121(1)
6.2 Towards a characterization of conceptual and procedural encoding
122(1)
6.3 Procedural meaning and discourse connectives
123(2)
6.4 A procedural view of causal markers
125(10)
6.4.1 Enriching the definition of procedural meaning
127(1)
6.4.2 Causal markers and base-order explicatures
128(5)
6.4.3 Causal markers and higher-order explicatures
133(2)
6.5 A conceptual view of causal markers
135(15)
6.5.1 Meaning relations
140(4)
6.5.2 More on the conceptual view of causal markers
144(1)
6.5.3 Truth conditional meaning and discourse markers
145(1)
6.5.3.1 A truth-conditional view of conceptual causal markers
146(4)
6.6 Basic findings
150(2)
6.7 Lexical pragmatics
152(6)
6.8 Further remarks on the conceptual or procedural view of epeiδi and yiati
158(2)
6.9 Other uses of epeiδi
160(11)
6.9.1 Pre-posed epeiδi
163(1)
6.9.1.1 Pre-posed epeiδi: The data
164(4)
6.9.1.2 Epeiδi: Further considerations
168(3)
6.10 Discourse markers and (non-)propositional meaning
171(9)
6.11 Metacommunicative causality
180(9)
Conclusions 189(6)
Reference list 195(10)
Index 205