- •Practical Class 1. Basic Assumptions of Linguopragmatics
- •Issues To Be Discussed:
- •Definition
- •Structural Ambiguity
- •Origins
- •Areas of Interest
- •Referential Uses of Language
- •Related Fields
- •Criticisms of Pragmatics
- •Entailment
- •Implicature
- •Implicature and implication
- •Practical reason
- •Presupposition
- •Negation of a sentence containing a presupposition
- •Other uses of the term
Negation of a sentence containing a presupposition
If presuppositions of a sentence are not consistent with the actual state of affairs, then one of two approaches can be taken. Given the sentences My wife has arrived and My wife has not arrived when one has no wife, then either:
Both the sentence and its negation are false; or
Strawsons approach: Both "my wife has arrived " and "my wife has not arrived " use a wrong presupposition (that there exists an object which can be described with the noun phrase my wife) and therefore can not be assigned truth values.
Russell tries to solve this dilemma with two interpretations of the negated sentence:
"There exists exactly one person, who is my wife and who has not arrived"
"There does not exist exactly one person, who is my wife and who has arrived."
For the first phrase, Russell would claim that it is false, whereas the second would be true according to him.
Other uses of the term
Critical discourse analysis identifies the ideological function of presuppositions, particularly in the concept of synthetic personalisation.
In epistemology, presuppositions relate to a belief system and are required for it to make sense. Presuppositions form our worldview. The first presupposition we all make is either "there is a god" or "there is no god." From this point, every circumstance and fact we analyze will be categorized to prove one or the other point. A Christian presupposes that there will be life after death. For this reason, he tempers his actions more toward charity and obedience to God.
Task: find out yourself what epistemology is.
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Self-check questions:
Define the term “sign”. What is the essence of a hot debate about the nature of signs?
Why is indexicality sometimes seen as an alternative way to understanding reference?
Explain the difference between indexical and referential meaning. Give examples.
Define non-referential indexicality. Dwell on the levels of indexical meaning.
Characterize linguistic variants that act to index sex and gender. Give examples.
What is affective meaning? What examples of affective forms can you give?
Define T-V distinction. Dwell on its history and usage.
Give the definition to honorifics. Characterize modern English and Japanese honorifics. Compare them with Ukrainian ones.
Who invented the term ‘implicature’?
What are the differences between practical and theoretical reason?
Which of the logical statements is the most complicated?
Inferences:
From the information read above we can make an inference that there are three main logical interconnections that need to be distinguished while making the analysis of utterances: entailments, implicature and presupposition. The are (or are supposed to be) all predetermined by practical reason. These logical interconnections should be derived from any utterance by means of applying their relationship to each other and to the truth/false of the utterance.
