On Phrasal Pragmatics and What is Descriptively Referred to Cover Image
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On Phrasal Pragmatics and What is Descriptively Referred to
On Phrasal Pragmatics and What is Descriptively Referred to

Author(s): Esther Romero, Belén Soria
Subject(s): Philosophy
Published by: KruZak
Keywords: contextualism; pragmatic; definite descriptions; unarticulated constituents

Summary/Abstract: In this paper, we discuss contextualism, a philosophical position that some pragmatists have endorsed as a result of the philosophical reflection on pragmatics as a science. In particular, we challenge, from the results on phrasal pragmatics, the contextualist approach on incomplete definite descriptions and referential metonymy according to which optional pragmatic processes of interpretation are required (an optional pragmatic process of recovering unarticulated constituents for incompleteness and an optional pragmatic process of transfer for metonymy). By contrast, we argue from the standpoint of phrasal pragmatics that what is descriptively referred to depends, in both cases, on truth-conditionally mandatory pragmatic processes of recovery of unarticulated constituents.

  • Issue Year: X/2010
  • Issue No: 28
  • Page Range: 63-84
  • Page Count: 22
  • Language: English