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CONTEXTUALISM AND THE ROLE OF CONTEXTUAL FRAMES
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Palavras-chave

Semantic minimalism. Contextualism. Minimal proposition. Linguistic understanding. What is said. Contextual frames.

Como Citar

BEZUIDENHOUT, Anne. CONTEXTUALISM AND THE ROLE OF CONTEXTUAL FRAMES. Manuscrito: Revista Internacional de Filosofia, Campinas, SP, v. 32, n. 1, p. 59–84, 2015. Disponível em: https://periodicos.sbu.unicamp.br/ojs/index.php/manuscrito/article/view/8642048. Acesso em: 26 abr. 2024.

Resumo

Some part of the debate between minimalists and contextualists can be construed as merely terminological and can be resolved by agreeing to a certain division of labor. Minimalist claims are to be understood as (not necessarily correct) claims about what is needed for adequate formal compositional semantic models of language understood in abstraction from real conversational contexts. Contextualist claims are ones about how language users produce and understand utterances by manipulating features of the psychological and discourse contexts of the conversational participants in real conversational settings. However, some minimalists have attempted to engage contextualists more directly by defending a form of psychological minimalism. The minimal proposition expressed by a sentence S is construed either as the most general content shared by all possible utterances of S or as the content that expresses the fewest commitments. Both conceptions are shown to be problematic by an extended analysis of the decontextualized sentence ‘John is ready’. Finally, evidence is presented from the psychological literature to show that lack of contextual clues can seriously degrade understanding. This evidence points to the crucial role of discourse factors, such as conversational topics and other contextual framing devices, in utterance understanding.
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Referências

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