Topics in semantics and pragmatics

Basic Information

Course modules 2023/2024
Lecturer
Josep Macià
Semester
1st.
University
Universitat de Barcelona
Module
Module 7. Issues in Contemporary Theoretical and Practical Philosophy
Code
570640
Credits
5
Language
English

Dates

Schedule
Thursdays, 16:30-19:30
Location
Classroom 411, Faculty of Philosophy, Universitat de Barcelona

Description

This course is conceived as an introduction to some foundational topics on meaning and communication, as well as to the study of some recent developments and applications of some central notions in Semantics and Pragmatics.

Structure of the course, contents and primary readings:

● September 28: Introduction.

● October 5, 19: Meaning and intentions

Grice, H. P. (1957) “Meaning”, Philosophical Review, 66, 377-88.

Gluer, Kathrin. & Peter Pagin (2003) “Meaning Theory and Autistic Speakers”. Mind and Language. 18(1): 23-51.

● October 26: Saying and implicating

Grice, P., (1975) “Logic and conversation” (in Grice, P.: 1989, Studies in the Way of Words, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA)

● November 2: Assertion

Stalnaker, R. (1978). “Assertion”. In P. Cole (Ed.) Syntax and semantics (Vol. 9, pp. 315–332). New York: Academic Press. Also in R. Stalnaker, Context and content. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1999, pp. 78–95.

● November 9, 16: Lying vs. Untruthfully Implicating

Pepp, Jessica (2019). “Assertion, Lying, and Untruthfully Implicating,” in S. Goldberg, ed., The Oxford Handbook on Assertion. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2019.

Stokke, A. (2013). “Lying and asserting”. Journal of Philosophy, 110 (1), 33–60.

● November 23: Communication and commitments

Mazzarella, Diana, Robert Reinecke, Ira Noveck, Hugo Mercier (2018), “Saying, presupposing and implicating: How pragmatics modulates commitment”. Journal of Pragmatics, Volume 133, August 2018, Pages 15-27

● November 30: Presuppositions

Abbott, Barbara (2008). “Presuppositions and common ground”. Linguistics and Philosophy, 21, 523–538.

● December 14: Expressive meaning

Jeshion, Robin (2013). Slurs and Stereotypes. Analytic Philosophy 54 (3):314-329.

● Alternative topics:

Code words: Khoo, Justin. (2017) “Code Words in Political Discourse.” Philosophical Topics 45, 2: 33–64

Inclusive language: Class materials provided by the teacher.

Learning outcomes

CB6 – Students should be able to critically understand central texts in the philosophy of language in a way that puts them in a position to develop and apply original ideas.

CB9 - Students should be able to communicate their knowledge and their arguments to specialized audiences in a clear and articulate way.

CG2. Students should be able to design, create, develop and undertake new and innovative projects in their area of ​​expertise.

CG3. Students should be able to engage both in general and specific discussions in the domain of the philosophy of language. They should be able to conduct a philosophical discussion (orally and in written form), by putting forward, for example, general arguments or specific examples, in support of one’s position.

CG4. Students should be able to work both independently and in a team, in an international environment.

CG5. Students should be able to identify methodological errors, rhetorical, conventional and uncritical assumptions, vagueness and superficiality.

CE1. Students should be able to critically engage with the concepts and methods of contemporary philosophy of language.

CE2. Students should be able to identify the core arguments and theories of contemporary philosophy of language.

CE4. Students should be able to assess the writings of leading contemporary philosophers in the field of philosophy and the cognitive sciences.

CE5. Students should be able to identify and critically engage with the current state of a particular philosophical debate, and form a reasoned view, even if provisional, about it.

CE7. Students should be able to critically use specialized terminology in the field of philosophy of language.

Methodology

There will be a reading assigned to each session. For each of the readings the teacher will provide in advance a list of “reading questions” that should help the students understand the reading and focus on its most relevant parts. In class, we will discuss those reading questions and the teacher will typically also present and discuss some additional material. In each of the sessions, one of the students will do a short presentation of one particular issue within the topic discussed in that session.

Evaluation

Class participation (10%), class presentation (10%), two or three short papers or problem sets that will be related to the reading questions (80%).

Bibliography

Abbott, Barbara (2008). Presuppositions and common ground. Linguistics and Philosophy, 21, 523–538.

Cohen, Jonathan & Kehler, Andrew (2021). “Conversational Eliciture”. Philosophers' Imprint 21 (12).

Hom, Christopher, (2010), “Pejoratives”, Philosophy Compass. Volume 5, Issue 2, 164–185

von Fintel, Kai: (2008). “What is presupposition accommodation, again? Philosophical Perspectives 22 (1):137-170

García-Carpintero, M. (2018). On the Nature of Presupposition: A Normative Speech Act Account. Erkenntnis

Gauker, C. (2008). Against accommodation. Philosophical perspectives, 22, 171–205.

Gluer, Kathrin & Peter Pagin (2003) “Meaning Theory and Autistic Speakers”. Mind and Language. 18(1): 23-51.

Grice, H. P. (1957) “Meaning”, Philosophical Review, 66, 377-88 (also in Grice (1989))

Grice, H. P. (1969) “Utterer’s meaning and intentions”, (in Grice (1989))

Grice, P., (1975) “Logic and conversation” (in Grice, P (1989))

Grice, P., (1978) "Further notes on Logic and Conversation" (in Grice, P. (1989))

Grice, P. (1989) Studies in the Way of Words, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA
Geurts, B. (2019). “Communication as commitment sharing: speech acts, implicatures, common ground”. Theoretical Linguistics, 45(1-2), pp. 1-30.

Jeshion, Robin (2013). “Slurs and stereotypes”. Analytic Philosophy, 54(3): 314–329

Khoo, Justin. “Code Words in Political Discourse.” Philosophical Topics 45, 2 (2017): 33–64

Mazzarella, Diana, Robert Reinecke, Ira Noveck, Hugo Mercier (2018), “Saying, presupposing and implicating: How pragmatics modulates commitment”. Journal of Pragmatics, Volume 133, August 2018, Pages 15-27 

Pagin, Peter. 2014. Assertion. Stanford Enciclopedia of Philosophy.

Pepp, Jessica (2019). “Assertion, Lying, and Untruthfully Implicating,” in S. Goldberg, ed., The Oxford Handbook on Assertion. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2019.

Potts, Christopher, (2007) “The expressive dimension”. 2007. Theoretical Linguistics 33(2): 165–197.

Reboul, Anne (2006), HOT Theories of Meaning: The Link Between Language and Theory of Mind. Mind & Language, Vol. 21 No. 5 November 2006, pp. 587–596.

Sennet, A. (2018). Presupposition triggering and disambiguation. In G. Preyer, Beyond Semantics and Pragmatics. Oxford: OUP.

Simons, Mandy. (2003). Presupposition and accommodation: Understanding the stalnakerian picture. Philosophical Studies, 112, 251–278.

Simons, M., Tonhauser, J., Beaver, D., & Roberts, C. (2011). What projects and why. Proceedings of Semantics and Linguistic Theory (SALT), 22, 309–327.

Soames, Scott (1989) “Presupposition”, In D. Gabbay and F. Guenthner (eds), Handbook of Philosophical Logic IV, 553-616.

Stalnaker, R. (1978). “Assertion”. In P. Cole (Ed.) Syntax and semantics (Vol. 9, pp. 315–332). New York: Academic Press. Also in R. Stalnaker, Context and content. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1999, pp. 78–95.

Stalnaker, R. (2002). Common ground. Linguistics and Philosophy, 25, 701–721.

Stokke, A. (2013b). “Lying and asserting”. Journal of Philosophy, 110(1), 33–60.

Williamson, T. (1996/2000). Knowing and Asserting. Philosophical Review 105, pp. 489–523; included with some revisions as chapter 11 of his Knowledge and its limits. New York: Oxford UP, 2000.

Other considerations

In agreement with the University of Barcelona Equality Policy (Pla d’Igualtat), this course will incorporate a so called gender perspective that will include, among others, the following aspects: regarding class dynamics, we will try to ensure that everyone feels equally welcomed and encouraged to contribute to class discussions; regarding the content of the course and the readings that will be the basis for the different sessions of the course, we will use a bibliography that takes appropriately into account the significant contributions made by women to the topics that we will discuss; regarding the grading of the course, we will try to be aware that unconscious gender biases might interfere in the process of grading problem sets, papers, and other aspects of the course, and will try to apply mechanisms to prevent them.