Pragmatic Inference, Conversational Implicature

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 36
At a glance
Powered by AI
The key takeaways are that pragmatic inference (conversational implicature) communicates much of what is meant beyond what is literally said through context-dependent inferences. Grice proposed a Cooperative Principle and conversational maxims as an idealization to explain how implicatures are derived.

Grice's Cooperative Principle proposes that conversations proceed cooperatively, with participants making contributions as required by the purpose of the exchange. Conversational implicature is derived through supposing the speaker is observing the Cooperative Principle, even when not strictly adhering to it.

Grice proposed four conversational maxims: quantity, quality, relation, and manner. The maxims provide guidelines for how cooperative contributions should be made in terms of being informative but not more so, truthful, relevant, and clear.

Pragmatic Inference (Conversational Implicature)

Many things get communicated by entailments. Many more things get communicated by pragmatic inference, a kind of reading between the lines. Pragmatic inferences are context-dependent and cancellable (defeasible).

Grices Cooperative Principle The cooperative principle is part of a theory of how people interact with one another:

Make your contribution such as it is required, at the stage at which it occurs, by the accepted purpose or direction of the talk exchange in which you are engaged.

Grices Conversational Maxims

Maxim of Quantity: Make your contribution to the conversation as informative as necessary, but not more informative. Maxim of Quality: Do not say what you believe to be false or inadequately justied. Maxim of Relevance (Relation): Be relevant! Maxim of Manner: Avoid obscurity of expression. Be unambiguous, brief, and orderly.
3

A theoretical idealization Not meant as a description of what people actually do.

Conversational Implicature (Simplied) S conversationally implicates p when:

1. S is presumed to be observing the Cooperative Principle; 2. The supposition that S believes p is required to make Ss utterance consistent with the Cooperative Principle; and 3. S believes H can gure 2 out.

Sometimes Routine

Maxim of Relation: A: Im out of gas. B: Theres a gas station around the corner. implicates As far as A knows, the gas station is open...

Flouting the Maxims Appearing not to cooperate, but relying on the Cooperative Principle to guide the interpretive process, e.g.

Flouting the Maxim of Quality. A: Are you going to Pauls party? B: I dont like parties. (B is known to be a party animal.)

Flouting the Maxim of Manner

A: Lets get the kids something B: OK, but I veto I-C-E-C-R-E-A-M (B doesnt want an open discussion of the ice cream) A: Miss Singer produced a series of sounds corresponding closely to the score of an aria from Rigoletto. (A thinks Miss Singer sang badly.)

Flouting the Maxim of Quantity: Some athletes smoke implicates Not all athletes smoke. Flouting the Maxim of Relation: Alan: Are you going to Pauls party? Barb: I have to work. (Barb isnt going to Pauls Party.)

Particularized vs. Generalized Implicature

a. Particularized conversational implicature: A: Wheres John B: The pubs are open implicates John is probably in a pub b. Generalized conversational implicature (GCIs) He ate some of the cookies implicates He didnt eat all of the cookies (Default inference)

Generalized Quantity 1

GQ1: First Maxim of Quantity Grice: Make your contribution as informative as is required Q1: Heuristic: What isnt said, isnt Restriction: for sets of alternates, use of one (especially a weaker) implicates inapplicability of a another (especially a stronger).

Generalized Quantity Implicatures

scalar:

all, some : some implicates not all none, not all

negative scales: clausal:

since/when-p-q, if-p-q yellow, red..

non-entailment sets:

Some of the boys came implicates not all Three boys came in implicates not four Possibly, theres life on Mars implicates not certainly

13

Not all of the boys came (in fact none) implicates some If John comes, Ill go implicates maybe he will, maybe he wont Her dress was red implicates not red and blue

14

Grice

GQ2: Second Maxim of Quantity Grice: Do not make your contribution more informative than is required Q2: Heuristic: What isnt said is the obvious Tendency: best interpretation to the stereotypical, most explanatory reading

Grice

Jones drove down a road implicates Jones drove down a hard-surfaced road If you mow the lawn, Ill give you $5 implicates If you dont mow the lawn, I wont give you $5 John turned the switch and the motor started implicates p and then q, p caused q, John intended p to cause q, etc.

Maxim of Quality: Dont say what you dont have adequate evidence to support (or believe to be false) Moores Paradox: Obama was elected, but I dont believe it.

17

Maxim of Manner: Grice: Be perspicuous, specically, avoid obscurity of expression, avoid prolixity (Grices M1 & M4) Manner Heuristic: Whats said in an abnormal way isnt normal Restriction: abnormal = marked (prolix or non-colloquial); thus doublenegation, repetition, use of marked alternates, e.g.

Its not impossible that implicates is rather unlikely. It is possible that implicates is somewhat unlikely. He ran and ran and ran implicates He ran fast and far The corners of Sues lips turned slightly upward implicates Sue didnt exactly smile

19

More examples of Implicature

Bill caused the car to stop implicates Bill actions were less directly involved in making the car stop than would have been Q2-implicated by Bill stopped the car He ordered a beverage implicates He ordered something other than might have been Q2implicated by He ordered a drink

20

More examples of Implicature

He is meeting a woman tomorrow night. Content: He is meeting X ; X is a woman. Relevance: how he describes the person hes meeting: most salient woman in the set of possible referents; by not referring to her unambiguously, the inference is drawn that the woman isnt his wife

21

More examples of Implicature

I must inform you that X. Content: X Relevance: makes the issue of whether I am required to inform you relevant. Sets up scale: delightfully do , freely do , willingly do , obligatorily do I dont want to tell you this.

22

More examples of Implicature

There may be extraterrestial life. implicates I dont know if there is. Kim likes either Sandy or Bo implicates Kim doesnt like both On the $2.98 lunch, you get soup or salad implicates not both.

More examples of Implicature

A: Are you going to the Big Game? B: Is the Pope catholic? (reconcile this with relevance) C: I did not not have sexual relations with that woman.

More examples of Implicature

Indirect Speech Acts: Can you pass the salt... Why dont you move to California... Questioning the hearer-based preconditions of act A implicates the speaker wants the hearer to do A: Is the salt near you? Can you reach the salt?

Grice

Asserting the speaker-based preconditions of act A implicates the speaker wants the hearer to do A: I want the salt. I want you to pass the salt. Id like you to pass the salt.

Pragmatic Inference vs. Entailment

From All Stanford students eat tofu and drink Jamba Juice you can draw the inference that All Stanford students eat tofu in any context, any time, anywhere.

27

By contrast: A: Do you want to go out for a walk? B: Its dark out. [A infers that B doesnt want to go out]

A: Is it time to go Trick-or-Treating yet? B: Its dark out. [A infers that B thinks its time for Trick-or-Treat]

28

More Pragmatic Inference

A: Do you want to go to the Big Game? B: Is the pope catholic? A: Do you want to go to the Big Game? B: Do you think Im crazy?

29

Pragmatic Inference vs. Entailment

#My friend Kim is a bachelor; (but) in fact Kim is married. Bo has fty bucks, in fact hes got a hundred. Its cool in here, in fact its freezing.

30

Pragmatic Inference vs. Entailment

Conversational Implicature is defeasible (cancellable); Entailment is not. Conversational Implicature is non-detachable; entailment is detachable.

31

The Status of Or

Are there two words or in English (inclusive and exclusive)? Youre allowed in if youre a Stanford student or if you live in Palo Alto. (ne to be both) On the $3.50 lunch, youre allowed to have a soup or a salad. (only one or the other)

32

Conclusion

Pragmatic provides the beginnings of an account of whats communicated beyond whats literally said. Most work builds on Grices pioneering work developing the theory of conversational implicature. This work uses the Cooperative Principle and the 4 maxims as an idealization. It seeks to explain why some of what gets communicated is cancellable (only suggested), depends on context, and has to be calculated.
33

What is said vs. What is meant.

34

Context intrudes into content: implicature/impliciture

35

Context intrudes into content: disambiguation

36

You might also like