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Context-Dependence in the Analysis of Linguistic Meaning [Kõva köide]

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Does context and context-dependence belong to the research agenda of semantics - and, specifically, of formal semantics? Not so long ago many linguists and philosophers would probably have given a negative answer to the question. However, recent developments in formal semantics have indicated that analyzing natural language semantics without a thorough accommodation of context-dependence is next to impossible. The classification of the ways in which context and context-dependence enter semantic analysis, though, is still a matter of much controversy and some of these disputes are ventilated in the present collection. This book is not only a collection of papers addressing context-dependence and methods for dealing with it: it also records comments to the papers and the authors' replies to the comments. In this way, the contributions themselves are contextually dependent.

In view of the fact that the contributors to the volume are such key figures in contemporary formal semantics as Hans Kamp, Barbara Partee, Reinhard Muskens, Nicholas Asher, Manfred Krifka, Jaroslav Peregrin and many others, the book represents a quite unique inquiry into the current activities on the semantics side of the semantics/pragmatics boundary.

I Papers
5(328)
Empty-Domain Effects for Presuppositional and Non-Presuppositional Determiners
7(22)
Dorit Abusch
Mats Rooth
From Discourse Macro-Structure to Micro-Structure and Back Again: Discourse Semantics and the Focus/Background Distinction
29(32)
Nicholas Asher
Fixing the Reference Situations: German Temporal Conjunctions
61(18)
Rainer Bauerle
Accommodating Topics
79(12)
David Beaver
On Context and Identity
91(26)
Paul Dekker
Are Context Change Potentials Functions?
117(20)
Tim Fernando
A Minimal Theory of Adverbial Quantification
137(40)
Kai von Fintel
Focus and the Boundaries of the Language System
177(10)
Eva Hajicova
Focus and/or Context: A Second Look at Second Occurrence Expressions
187(22)
Manfred Krifka
Topic, Focus, and Some Aspects of the Semantics of Discourse
209(12)
Petr Kubon
Why not Kim Basinger? On the `Art des Gegebenseins' of a contextually given set
221(18)
Arthur Merin
Order-Independence and Underspecification
239(16)
Reinhard Muskens
Dynamic Semantics with Choice Functions
255(20)
Jaroslav Peregrin
Klaus von Heusinger
Topics and the Conceptual Interface
275(32)
Tanya Reinhart
Presuppositions of Existence and of Uniqueness, and Allegation
307(12)
Petr Sgall
Tertiumne datur? Possessive Pronouns and the Bipartition of the Lexicon
319(14)
Thomas Ede Zimmermann
II Comments
333(206)
Comments on Tim Fernando: Mathematical Treatments of Contexts
335(6)
Nicholas Asher
Comments on Manfred Krifka: Can Pragmatic Accounts Explain Pseudo-Secondary Effects of Focus?
341(4)
Nicholas Asher
Comments on Asher and Krifka: Acoustic Correlates of `Second Occurrence' Focus: Toward an Experimental Investigation
345(18)
Christine Bartels
Comments on Beaver's and von Fintel's Theories of Presupposition Accommodation
363(12)
Stephen Berman
Comments on Zimmermann: Tertium Evitari Non Potest: On Ede Zimmermann's Bipartition of the Lexicon
375(8)
Manfred Bierwisch
Cases, Adverbs, Situations and Events
383(22)
Paul Dekker
Comments on Beaver: Presupposition Accommodation and Quantifier Domains
405(6)
Kai von Fintel
Comments on Reinhart: The Syntactic Roots of Discourse Cohesion
411(8)
Kai von Fintel
Comments on von Fintel
419(2)
Eva Hajicova
Remarks on Focus Sensitive Particles (to Krifka's and von Fintel's Papers)
421(4)
Eva Hajicova
Petr Sgall
Remarks on DRT and TFA
425(6)
Eva Hajicova
Petr Sgall
Comments on Kaplan's `Demonstratives' and Zimmermann's `Tertiumne Datur? Possessive Pronouns and the Bipartition of the Lexicon'
431(28)
Hans Kamp
Antje Roßdeutscher
Comments on Dekker
459(4)
Jaroslav Peregrin
Comments on Krifka
463(4)
Jaroslav Peregrin
A Comment on Reinhard Muskens' Paper: Order Independence and Underspecification
467(10)
Manfred Pinkal
Comments on Krifka's Paper
477(12)
Mats Rooth
Topichood and the Stage/Individual Distinction
489(12)
Henriette de Swart
Negation: Scope and Anaphora
501(14)
Henriette de Swart
Topic, focus and presupposition
515(6)
Henriette de Swart
Remarks on the Epistemic Role of Discourse Referents
521(18)
Thomas Ede Zimmermann
III Authors' Replies
539
Minimal Replies to Dekker, Hajicova & Sgall, Berman and de Swart
541(8)
Kai von Fintel
Replies to Rooth, Bartels, Asher and Peregrin
549(4)
Manfred Krifka
Replies to Bierwisch, Kamp & Roßdeutscher and Muskens
553
Thomas Ede Zimmermann


Paul Portner is Associate Professor of Linguistics and Acting Director of the Interdisciplinary Program in Cognitive Science at Georgetown University. He is the author of numerous articles on topics such as mood and modality, tense and aspect, and the syntax/semantics interface. Barbara H. Partee is Distinguished University Professor of Linguistics and Philosophy at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst and is the author of several landmark essays in formal semantics. She has written and edited numerous books, including Mathematical Methods in Linguistics (with Alice ter Meulen and Robert Wall, 1990), Montague Grammar (edited, 1976), and Quantification in Natural Languages (edited, with Emmon Bach, Eloise Jelinek, and Angelika Kratzer, 1995).