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Abstract

I explain what exactly constrains presupposition projection in compound sentences and argue that the presuppositions that do not project are conditionalized, giving rise to inferable conditional presuppositions. I combine elements of (Gazdar in Pragmatics: implicature, presupposition, and logical form. Academic Press, New York 1979) and (van der Sandt in Context and presupposition. Croom Helm, London 1988) which, together with an additional, independently motivated assumption, make it possible to construct an analysis that makes correct predictions. The core of my proposal is as follows: When a speaker felicitously utters a compound sentence whose constituent clauses (considered in isolation) require presuppositions, the hearer will infer that the speaker presupposes those propositions, unless the sentence contains some element that makes the hearer realize that, if the speaker actually presupposed them, she would be either uninformative or inconsistent in her beliefs. In these cases, the propositions that would have been presupposed, had the clauses been uttered in isolation, will not be presupposed, i.e. the clausal presuppositions will not project.

Details

Title
Presupposition Projection and Conditionalization
Author
Garcia-Odon, Amaia 1 

 University of the Basque Country, Leioa, Biscay, Spain 
Pages
145-156
Publication year
2016
Publication date
Apr 2016
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
0167-7411
e-ISSN
1572-8749
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2291275813
Copyright
Topoi is a copyright of Springer, (2014). All Rights Reserved.