pragmatics - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 34
About This Presentation
Title:

pragmatics

Description:

Lecture 2 The scope of pragmatics background According to Morris (1971:24), each branch of semiotics can be further divided into pure studies and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:598
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 35
Provided by: cflcXmuE
Category:
Tags: pragmatics

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: pragmatics


1
? ? ? ? ?
  • Lecture 2

2
The scope of pragmatics
Background The term pragmatics stems from
the philospher Charles Morris (1938), who was
actually interested in semiotics (or semiotic).
Morris distinguished three branches of study
within semiotics syntactics (or syntax), the
study of the formal relation of signs to one
another, semantics, the study of the relations
of signs to the objects to which signs are
applicable, and pragmatics, the study of the
relation of signs to interpreters (19386).

3
background
  • According to Morris (197124), each branch of
    semiotics can be further divided into pure
    studies and descriptive studies. The former was
    concerned with the elaboration of the relevant
    metalanguage and the latter applied the
    metalanguage to the description of specific signs
    and their usages.

4
background
  • With his particular behavioristic theory of
    semiotics, Morris defined the scope of pragmatics
    as follows 
  • It is a sufficiently accurate
    characterization of pragmatics to say that it
    deals with the biotic aspects of semiosis, that
    is, with all the psychological, biological, and
    sociological phenomena which occur in the
    functioning of signs.(Morris,1938108)

5
background
  • Levinson(19832) holds that this scope of
    pragmatics is very much wider than the work that
    currently goes on under the rubric of linguistic
    pragmatics, for it would include what is now
    known as psycholinguistics, sociolinguistics,
    neurolinguistics and much besides. The term
    pragmatics have long been used in two different
    ways. On the one hand, the broad use intended by
    Morris has been retain, dealing mainly with
    matters as diverse as the psychopathology of
    communication and the evolution of symbol
    systems.

6
background
  • On the other hand, and especially within
    analytical philosophy, the term pragmatics was
    subject to a successive narrowing of scope.
  • If in an investigation explicit reference is made
    to the speaker, or to put it in more general
    terms, to the user of the language, then we
    assign it the investigation to the field of
    pragmatics...If we abstract from the user of the
    language and analyze only the expressions and
    their designata, we are in the field of
    semantics. And, finally, if we abstract from the
    designata also and analyze only the relations
    between the expressions, we are in (logical)
    syntax.

7
background
  • The idea that pragmatics was the study of aspects
    of language that required reference to the users
    of the language then led to a very natural,
    further restriction of the term in analytical
    philosophy. For there is one aspect of natural
    languages that indubitably requires such
    reference, namely the study of deitic or
    indexical words like the pronouns I and you.

8
background
  • For example,
  • I am Zhang Xiao, Zhang Xiao is a girl,
    therefore I am a girl.
  • If the first two premises are true and the
    speaker of the conclusion is the same speaker as
    the speaker of the first premise, then we say the
    statement is necessarily true. Bar-Hillel (1954)
    therefore took the view that pragmatics is the
    study of languages, both natural and artificial,
    that contain indexical or deictic terms.

9
background
  • In the late 1960s, an implicit version of
    Carnaps definition--- investigations requiring
    reference to the users of a language---was
    adopted within linguistics. At the same time,
    there was a keen interst shown by linguists in
    philosophers attempts to grapple with problems
    of meaning, sometimes from the point of view of
    the users of the language. During this period,
    the scope of pragmatics was implicitly
    restricted.

10
background
  • Levinson (1983) considers a set of possible
    definition of pragmatics. One possible definition
    goes as follows Pragmatics is the study of
    those principles that will account for why a
    certain set of sentences are anomalous, or not
    possible utterances. (Levinson, 19836) e.g.
  • (1) ??Come there please!
  • (2) ??Aristotle was Greek, but I dont
    believe it

11
background
  • (3) ??Johns children are hippies, and he has
    no children
  • (4) ??I order you not to obey this order
  • (5) ??I hereby sing
  • (6) ??As everyone knows, the earth please
    revolves around the sun

12
Background
  • The explanation of these anomalies might be
    provided by pointing out that there are no, or at
    least no ordinary, contexts in which they could
    be appropriately used. Although an approach of
    this sort may be quite a good way to illustrate
    the kind of principles that pragmatics is
    concerned with, it will hardly do as an explicit
    definition of the field, because the set of
    pragmatic anomalies are presupposed, rather than
    explained. One can possibly imagine contexts in
    which the alleged anomalies are quite usable.
    This problem will recur when we consider the
    concept of appropriateness of an utterance.

13
Background
  • Another kind of definition would be that
    pragmatics is the study of language from a
    functional perspective, that is, that it explains
    facets of linguistic structure by reference to
    non-linguistic pressures and causes. But such a
    definition would fail to distinguish linguistic
    pragmatics from many other disciplines interested
    in functional approaches to language, including
    psycholinguistics and sociolinguitstics. Such a
    definition confuses the motives for studying
    pragmatics with the goals or general shape of a
    theory.

14
Background
  • One quite restricted scope for pragmatics that
    has been proposed is that pragmatics should be
    concerned solely with the description of
    linguistic structure. Or, to use Chomskys
    distinction between competence and performance,
    pragmatics is concerned solely with performance
    principles of language use. Thus Katz Fodor
    (1963) suggested that a theory of pragmatics
    would essentially be concerned with the
    disambiguation of sentences by the contexts in
    which they were uttered.

15
Background
  • One could claim that grammar is concerned with
    the context-free assignment of meaning to
    linguistic forms, while pragmatics is concerned
    with the further interpretation of those forms in
    context, as Katz (197719) notes 
  • Grammars are theories about the structure
    of sentence types... Pragmatics theories, in
    contrast, do nothing to explicate the structure
    of linguistic constructions or grammatical
    properties and relations... They explicate the
    reasoning of speakers and hearers in working out
    the correlation in a context of a sentence taken
    with a proposition. In this respect, a pragmatic
    theory is part of performance.

16
Background
  • It seems that the term pragmatics covers both
    context-dependent aspects of language structure
    and principles of language usage and
    understanding that have nothing or little to do
    with linguistic structure. But this should not be
    taken to imply that pragmatics is concerned with
    quite disparate and unrelated aspects of
    language rather pragmatists are specifically
    interested in the inter-relation of language
    structure and principles of language usage.

17
Background
  • If we have a definition that is specifically
    aimed at capturing the concern of pragmatists
    with features of language structure. It might go
    as follows
  • Pragmatics is the study of those relations
    between language and context that are
    grammaticalized, or encoded in the structure of a
    language.

18
Background
  • Levinson (1983) gives some other definitions of
    the field
  • Pragmatics is the study of all those aspects
    of meaning not captured in a semantic theory.
  • Pragmatics is the study of the relations
    between language and context that basic to an
    account of language understanding.
  • Pragmatics is the study of the ability of
    language users to pair sentences with the
    contexts in which they would appropriate.
  • Pragmatics is the study of the deixis,
    implicature, presupposition, speech acts, and
    aspects of discourse structure.

19
the role of pragmatics
  • The need for a pragmatic component in an
    integrated theory of linguistic ability can be
    argued for in various ways. One way is to
    consider the relation of the pragmatics-semantics-
    syntax trichotomy to the competence-performance
    dichotomy proposed by Chomsky. In Chomskys view,
    grammars are models of competence, where
    competence is knowledge of a language idealized
    away from irregularity or error and variation to
    this, Katz influentially added idealization away
    from context.

20
the role of pragmatics
  • On such a view, insofar as pragmatics is
    concerned with context, it can be claimed that by
    definition pragmatics is not part of competence
    and thus not within the scope of grammatical
    descriptions. But suppose now we require that
    adequate grammatical descriptions include
    specifications of the meaning of every word in a
    language, and such a requirement has normally
    been assumed, then we find words whose
    meaning-specifications can only be given by
    reference to contexts of usage.

21
the role of pragmatics
  • For example, the meaning of words like well, oh
    and anyway in English cannot be explicated simply
    by statements of context-independent content
    rather one has to refer to pragmatic concepts
    like relevance, implicature, or discourse
    structure. So either grammars must make reference
    to pragmatic information, or they cannot include
    full lexical description of a language.

22
Current interests in Pragmatics
  • Pragmatic principles of language usage can be
    shown systematically to read in to utterances
    more than they conventionally or literally mean.
    Such regularly superimposed implications can then
    become quite hard to disentangle from sentence or
    literal meaning in order to put them apart, the
    theorist has to construct or observe contexts in
    which the usual pragmatic implications do not
    hold.

23
Current interests in Pragmatics
  • For example, it seems perfectly natural to claim
    that the quantifier some in the following means
    some and not all
  • Some ten cent pieces are rejected by this
    vending machine.
  • But suppose I am trying to use the machine, and I
    try coin after coin unsuccessfully, and I utter
    the above sentence I might then very well
    communicate
  • Some, and perhaps all, ten cent pieces are
    rejected by this vending machine.

24
Current interests in Pragmatics
  • Pragmatists also realized that there is a very
    substantial gap between current linguistic
    theories of language and accounts of linguistic
    communication. When linguists talk of the goal of
    linguistic theory as being the construction of an
    account of a sound-meaning correspondence for the
    infinite set of sentences in any language, one
    might perhaps infer that such a theory would give
    an account of at least the essential of how we
    communicate using language.

25
Current interests in Pragmatics
  • There is a substantial gap between a semantic
    theory and a complete theory of linguistic
    communication. Where are we to account for the
    hints, implicit purposes, assumptions, social
    attitudes and so on that are effectively
    communicated by the use of language? For example,
    in the following extracts from recorded
    conversations, the responses to an utterance
    indicate that for participants the utterance
    carried the implications indicated in brackets

26
Current interests in Pragmatics
  • (1) A I could eat the whole of that cake
    implication I compliment you on the cake
  • B Oh thanks
  • (2) A Do you have coffee to go?
    Implication Sell me coffee to go if you can
  • B Cream and sugar?
  • (3) A Hi John
  • B Howre you doing?
  • A Say, whatre you doing Implication
    Ive got a suggestion about what we might do
    together
  • B Well, were going out. Why?
  • A Oh I was just going to say come out ...

27
Understanding and Using Language
  • P Whats your name by the way
  • S Stephen
  • P You havent asked my name back
  • S Whats your name
  • P Its Pat

28
Understanding and Using Language
  • Appropriacy
  • I think you could go in now you know
  • Are we all here
  • Non-literal or indirect meaning
  • Right, shall we begin
  • Inference
  • Im a man. (a woman colleague says)
  • Female toilet on floor above (a sign on the door
    of the gentlemens toilet)

29
Understanding and Using Language
  • Indeterminacy (utterances are underdetermined)
  • Im a man
  • I really like your new haircut
  • Are you here Peter
  • Context
  • Im tired (say at night or in the morning)
  • Relevance
  • I suppose today its especially important to be
    thinking carefully about what our students say to
    us

30
Understanding and Using Language
  • Misfires (misfires are important because they
    tell us that there are expected norms for talk by
    showing us the effect when the norm is not
    achieved.)
  • Will you have some more chocolate
  • I didnt even have any to begin with

31
Pragmatics in China
  • ????????1980??3?
  • ????????1988?
  • ????????1989?
  • ?????????????
  • ???????

32
Pragmatics in China
  • ??????????
  • ????
  • ????????????
  • ??????
  • ???????
  • 1989???????????

33
Pragmatics in the World
  • Relevance theory (1986)
  • ????

34
End of Lecture
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com