Obligatory implicatures and the relevance of contradictions
Moshe E. Bar-Lev
March 2024
 

Magri (2009a,b) proposed a generalization according to which a sentence is infelicitous whenever exhaustification over the full set of formal alternatives of the sentence leads to contextual contradiction. While Magri proposes an account of obligatory implicatures which explains some cases where this generalization expects infelicity, he does not provide a general account of this generalization. In this paper I argue for a perspective on the ‘pruning’ of alternatives which predicts this generalization, building on the counter-intuitive idea that contradictions are relevant in every context (Lewis 1988). I further argue, using disjunction in the scope of a universal quantifier as a test case, that an extension of this view to obligatory ignorance inferences provides a new perspective on the Logical Integrity Generalization put forward by Anvari (2018b), while avoiding some empirical problems for this generalization.
Format: [ pdf ]
Reference: lingbuzz/007164
(please use that when you cite this article)
Published in: To appear in Journal of Semantics
keywords: implicature, exhaustification, pruning, contradiction, alternatives, ignorance inferences, semantics
previous versions: v3 [November 2023]
v2 [November 2023]
v1 [March 2023]
Downloaded:862 times

 

[ edit this article | back to article list ]