Non-lexical pragmatics : time, causality and logical words /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Moeschler, Jacques, author.
Imprint:Berlin/Boston : Walter de Gruyter GmbH, [2020]
©2020
Description:1 online resource (xvi, 277 pages) : illustrations
Language:English
Series:Mouton Series in Pragmatics [MSP] ; v. 23
Mouton series in pragmatics ; 23.
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/13513725
Hidden Bibliographic Details
ISBN:9783110218497
3110218496
9783110394634
3110394634
9783110218480
3110218488
Notes:Includes bibliographical references and indexes
Print version record
Summary:This book presents both general issues in pragmatic theories and specific arguments for an inferential approach to pragmatics. At the present time, pragmatics is generally approached from the neo- and post-Gricean perspectives. These perspectives, which stem from philosophical theories of meaning, can be viewed as paradigms, that is, sets of concepts, procedures and results which structure scientific investigations. The main purpose of the book is to defend a new post-Gricean approach to the substantial lexicon and to the functional lexicon (tenses, connectives), and more specifically to explore lexical and non-lexical pragmatics. A precise approach to lexical and non-lexical pragmatic contents will be developed, with special emphasis on non-lexical temporal and causal information. A model for inferring temporal relations in discourse (the directional inferences model based on French data) is developed. This approach to temporal representations and inferences will be completed by a discussion on how causal inferences are triggered in discourse interpretation. The role of conceptual causal relations, as well as causal procedural information encoded in discourse connectives (mainlyparce que 'because', donc 'therefore', et 'and'), is empirically and theoretically supported. Pragmatic theory can be described as a very powerful interface system which gives access to lexical and functional information, and which contains rich pragmatic enrichment processes, for non-lexical information (quantifier, tenses, connectives) as well as for lexical information (event predicates). The book's originality stems from its demonstration that pragmatic enrichment is structurally constrained, and occurs at the level of explicature
Other form:Print version: Moeschler, Jacques. Non-lexical pragmatics. Berlin : De Gruyter, [2020] 9783110218480