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E-raamat: Two-Tiered Theory of Control

(Ben Gurion University)
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This book revives and reinterprets a persistent intuition running through much of the classical work: that the unitary appearance of Obligatory Control into complements conceals an underlying duality of structure and mechanism. Idan Landau argues that control complements divide into two types: In attitude contexts, control is established by logophoric anchoring, while non-attitude contexts it boils down to predication. The distinction is also syntactically represented: Logophoric complements are constructed as a second tier above predicative complements.

The theory derives the obligatory de se reading of PRO as a special kind ofde re attitude without ascribing any inherent feature to PRO. At the same time, it provides a principled explanation, based on feature transmission, for the agreement properties of PRO, which are stipulated on competing semantic accounts. Finally, it derives a striking universal asymmetry: the fact that agreement on the embedded verb blocks control in attitude contexts but not in non-attitude contexts.

This book is unique in being firmly grounded in both the formal semantic and the syntactic studies of control, offering an integrated view that will appeal to scholars in both areas. By bringing to bear current sophisticated grammatical analyses, it offers new insights into the classical problems of control theory.

Series Foreword vii
Preface ix
1 Introduction
1(4)
2 The Agree Model: Fundamentals
5(12)
2.1 Typological Predictions
8(2)
2.2 The Formal Apparatus of the Agree Model
10(2)
2.3 Unsatisfactory Aspects of the Agree Model
12(5)
3 A New Proposal: Predication vs. Logophoric Anchoring
17(48)
3.1 Attitude and Nonattitude Contexts: Restating the Split
18(3)
3.2 PRO as a Bound Minimal Pronoun
21(3)
3.3 Predicative Control: PRO Movement
24(6)
3.4 Logophoric Control
30(16)
3.5 Agreement with the Controller
46(7)
3.6 Deriving the OC-NC Generalization
53(5)
3.7 OC vs. Nonlocal Variable Binding: A Note on Feature Deletion
58(3)
3.8 Solving the Problems with the Agree Model
61(4)
4 Broadening the Empirical Basis of the Two-Tiered Theory of Control
65(12)
4.1 [ ±human] PRO
66(2)
4.2 Implicit Control
68(7)
4.3 Control Shift
75(2)
5 Further Consequences of the Two-Tiered Theory of Control
77(6)
5.1 Partial Control
77(1)
5.2 Split Control
78(1)
5.3 Topic Control
79(1)
5.4 Controlled Lexical Pronouns/Reflexives
80(3)
6 Conclusion
83(4)
Notes 87(12)
References 99(12)
Index 111