Variable-free semantics and flexible grammars for anaphora
Simon Charlow
May 2021
 

Published as: On Jacobson’s "Towards a Variable-Free Semantics" in SLAP 100

Jacobson (1999) proposes an account of anaphora and binding that eschews variables and variable assignments, instead treating pronouns as identity functions and extending functional application with operations that pass up and close off anaphoric dependencies. This paper reviews the central aspects of Jacobson’s variable-free semantics, counterpoising it with the standard, variable-full framework. I discuss conceptual and empirical virtues of Jacobson’s theory, and some shortcomings, one significant. I argue that these limitations can be overcome by drawing on certain design features of the standard account, connect this approach to the computer science concept of ‘applicative functors’ (and thereby to frameworks as varied as alternative semantics and continuations), and clarify which of the variable-free theory’s properties should be regarded as proprietary, and which can be easily repurposed into a theory with variables.
Format: [ pdf ]
Reference: lingbuzz/004503
(please use that when you cite this article)
Published in: Studies in Linguistics and Philosophy 100, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-85308-2_10
keywords: variables, variable-free semantics, binding, pronouns, functional gaps, paycheck pronouns, applicative functors, semantics
previous versions: v7 [May 2021]
v6 [May 2021]
v5 [May 2021]
v4 [June 2019]
v3 [May 2019]
v2 [March 2019]
v1 [March 2019]
Downloaded:1826 times

 

[ edit this article | back to article list ]