Title: Hierarchy, Merge, and Truth San Sebastian, June 2006
1Hierarchy, Merge, and TruthSan Sebastian, June
2006
- Wolfram Hinzen
- Universiteit van Amsterdam, University of Durham
2The deflowering of trees
- Traditional assumption that linguistic expression
are hierarchically structured objects. - XP
-
- XP the
-
- XP the book the book
- Whatever hierarchies exist needs explanation in
line with the SMT. - Does minimalist syntax exhibit phrase structural
hierarchies? (Chametzky, 2000, 2003 Collins,
2002)
3Hierarchy via labels? Hornstein (2005)
- Merge is concatenation
- Concat (A,B) def A?B, with A, B atoms
- A non-hierarchical system
- Concat (C, A?B) C?A?B
- Enter labels, the crucial evolutionary
innovation - Concat (C, A?B) C?A A?B, with C, A A?B
atoms - Labeling identifies a complex structure with one
of its (atomic) inputs. - But why should the system be hierarchical?
- Labels are both unnecessary and insufficient to
yield it.
4Labels are lexical items
- Chomsky (2001, 2005) Labels are the only probes
and goals, the only thing the syntax ever sees
only the interfaces ever see phrases. - Due to the recursiveness of Merge, labels must be
lexical items. - Collins (2002) three explanatory factors for
syntax - (i) interaction of the properties of lexical
items - (ii) economy conditions
- (iii) interface (bare output) conditions.
5Deflating hierarchyThe Minimal Language
experiment
- Hierarchy ...is automatic for recursive
operations, conventionally suppressed for those
that merely enumerate a sequence of objects
(Chomsky, 2005). - Merge is recursive set-formation, n-ary abstract
from substantive lexical content (meaning), and
assume LEX?. Then - ? 1
- Merge (1) ? 2
- Merge (2) ? 3
- Merge (3) ? 4
- Etc.
- Merge applied in this manner yields the
successor function.
6Deflating hierarchy (cont.)
- c0 ? and cn1 cn, for all n.
- Suc(X) def X ? X
- X ? 1
- Succ(1) ?12
- Succ(2) ?, ?1, 23
- Succ(3) ?, ?, ?, ? 1, 2, 3 4
- Etc.
- It is straightforward to define addition in
terms of Merge (X,Y), and in familiar ways, the
rest of arithmetic. (Chomsky, 2005)
7Emergence of an ontology
- Ontology emerges by imposing structure on an
unstructured set (space), which results in new
spaces, which form a hierarchy, and each of which
has specific topological and algebraic
properties. - (N,) is a half-group
- (N,,0) is a monoid
- groups are monoids with inverses for each element
- e.g., (Z,) is an (Abelian) group, arising out of
N through making inverses with respect to
defined. - (Q,) is also a group, arising from Z by adding
inverses w.r.t. multiplication. - R arises from Q through topological completion
- With two inner operations, we get a ring, and
with an inner and an outer operation, a vector
space.
8Ontology in multiple dimensions
- Dimension of the vector space that Succ generates
is 1. - Intuitive concept of multiple dimensions a
series of series of series (Russell 1903) - Most general concept of a dimension in
mathematics chain length. E.g., - length of sub-spaces of a vectorspace contained
in one another - length of prime-ideals in a ring
- chain of manifolds included in one another (a
form of recursion) - In MP and evolution, number and multiply
dimensional spaces should simply come for free. - Dubischar et al. 1999 One of the main ideas of
this paper is to use geometrical structures, not
on the Euclidean space (in which the brain is
located), but on the cognitive information space
X (space of ideas).
9Ontological categories in the parts of speech
- Abstract objects
- Objects with a substance/mass
- Objects with a form/boundary
- Objects with change potential
- States
- Activities
- Accomplishments
- Achievements
Entail- ment
Entail- ment
10Correlations
- Syntax Semantics
- NP/DP objects/reference
- CP truth/judgements
- TP tensed events
- vP events
- (bare) SCs predication
- internalism
- externalism
11Where does the lexical ontology come from?
- EITHER it might be extra-linguistic i.e., all of
this is thought, or semantics. - But it seems circular to blame much of this
structure on the nature of the external physical
world. - OR it might be a reflection of structural
complexity in the concepts denoting the
respective objects. - But there may not be any such structure internal
to lexical items at all (atomism, Fodor 1998) - However, there are systematic interrelations
between these atoms (in particular, the necessary
entailments), which moreover seem to be
structure-driven.
12An internalist proposal HinzenUriagereka, 2006
- There is a syntactic structure to these things,
but it is not accompanied by a compositional
semantics. - This yields entailments if the syntactic
structuring is such that a hierarchy is built
into the architecture of the formal system
itself, i.e. the system is multi-dimensional. - Essential intuition (taken from Uriagereka,
1995) LEX provides unstructured conceptual
spaces (atoms) through a small-clause adjoined
predicate this space is structured, giving it a
particular presentation.
13Constructing a complex concept the fabric of
reference
Nothing is on top here.
- Animate SC
- Count Presentation SC
- Mass Presentation SC
- Abstract Presentation Space PREDICATE
SUBJECT
14Back to structure-building (Merge) as modeled on
Succ
- Merge qua set-of is n-ary a form of hierarchy
follows automatically when n2. - Merge(1,2)1, 2
- Merge(3, 1,2)3, 1, 2
- Etc.
- kill, buffalo
- Hill, kill, buffalo
- -ed, Hill, kill, buffalo
- Merge thus construed yields a mono-categorial and
in this sense non-hierarchical system it never
produces anything ontologically new (labels dont
help in this regard).
15Adjuncts
- Pure adjuncts exhibit a (particularly simple)
form of dependency - walk quickly
- ?e walking (e) quick (e)
- Characterized mainly negatively
- a. Adjunction of ? to ? does not change any
properties of ?. - b. It behaves as if ? is not there, apart from
semantic interpretation. - c. is not the projection of any head.
- d. Adjuncts dont receive theta-roles or check
morphological features. - e. Cannot encode the argument-of relation
correlated with head-complement dependencies.
16A window into an (almost) syntaxless mind
- Adjunction is, more positively
- additive iterative (stackable) unboundedly
- symmetrical
- compositional
- If we wish to motivate anything in syntax from
conditions imposed by the semantic interface,
adjuncts (an operation of predicate
composition, Chomsky, 2004, 2005) are the place
to look they LACK (MUCH) OF SYNTAX. - A proto-language moreover would not need to
contain anything else than adjunction. - But there is no reference or truth in this system
(that apparently needs more syntax). - And there are no categories.
17A tight correspondence between one-dimensional
Merge (Add) and adjunction
- Adjunction of A to B does not change any
properties of B - and there is no projection of a new category
under Merge (with or without labeling). - Adjunction is symmetrical and unbounded
- and so is Merge.
- The putative asymmetry between the head and the
adjunct (Chomsky, 2004) is simply not visible in
a one-dimensional system.
18What else is on the other side?
- Most animals think but we are asking for the
format of their thoughts. - C-I incorporates a dual semantics, with
generalized argument structure as one component,
the other being discourse-related and scopal
properties. (Chomsky, 2005) - But are propositions waiting there to be
expressed by language? Is there a pre-linguistic
ability of intentional reference? - Many reasons for scepticism (e.g. Terrace, 2005)
19What if there is no I-interface?
- No conceptual necessity that it exists all
thats needed is that products of CS are usable - I.e., some, and not necessarily all, of its
information lends itself to certain purposes. - Intentional reference increases in sophistication
as structural complexity builds up incrementally. - NP Caesars destruction of Syracuse
- vP Caesar destroy Syracuse
- TP Caesar destroyed Syracuse
- CP That Caesar destroyed Syracuse
- lion
- I ate D0 lion
- lions are tasty
- I ate a lion
20What if there is no C-interface?
- Argument structure
- Semantics is not conjunctive kill Bill does
not mean ?ekilling(e) Bill(e) - Involves integral (part-whole) relations between
an event and its participants. - Highly bounded, and in this sense not recursive.
21An overall internalist conclusion
- The semantic or extra-linguistic motivation of
structural conditions of human thought stops at a
point, as things get more syntactic. - Whatever is beyond this point has to find an
internalist explanation in the CS of language
itself. - Merge/Add has nothing to say about it.
- An internally productive syntax can be no more
based on something with the algebraic properties
of Succ than arithmetic can, being
multi-dimensional.
22Explaining truth
- Truth is a human universal the best distributed
good in the world (cf. Descartes, 1637, on the
bon sens) - As a concept unexplainable yet understood by
everyone theory unneeded (why would a
conceptual atom have a theory anyhow?). - Theres adaptive behaviour, complex computation,
functional reference, systematicity, etc., before
any creature has thoughts about existence or
truth. - Applied by humans to anything that has the form
of a (declarative) sentence, and to nothing that
doesnt. - The universal truth/reference distinction makes
little semantic sense (Carstairs-McCarthy, 1999).
23The unthinkable?
- Emergence of the intentional - reference and
truth through the functional layers of the
clause?
24Syntax of integral predication of truth (Hinzen,
Truths Fabric, 2003)
- be DP
- Spec D
- D0 AgrP
- Spec Agr
-
- Agr 0 SC
- SPACE PRESENTATION
Intent- ional
Conce- ptual
truth
proposition
25Internalism about truth
- Truth cannot easily be integrated into the
internalist framework (PMM Cecchetto 1997) - But why?
- It is language-internally and structurally
grounded (Hinzen, 2006c) - not epistemically, communicatively, perceptually,
or action-theoretically (as everyone holds).
26Summary
- The more we deflate our idea of what syntax does,
we make ourselves hostage to an inflated idea of
what externally imposed interface conditions can
motivate. - Return to a (more minimalist) use-theory of
meaning. - Language is not at least not wholly a
linking system. - The idea that structure-building in FL reduces to
one-dimensional sequencing (Add) is very
unlikely true, though that operation is part of
the system, and possibly the true locus of
recursion. - The true locus of hierarchy, the argument
structure system and the categories, resources
are extremely limited - 3 arguments
- 3 lexical categories
- 3 functional categories
- A derivation bottoms out conceptually
intentionality comes later, as a function of the
structure constructed.