Pragmatic connectives, argumentative coherence and relevance.Jacques Moeschler -1989 -Argumentation 3 (3):321-339.detailsThis article is concerned with pragmatic connectives and their uses in discursive argumentation. Three approaches to pragmatic connectives will be presented: (1) argumentation theory, which implies a conception of pragmatics integrated within semantics, and a specific type of argumentative rules, called ‘topoi’; (2) discourse structure theory, which associates a function in the structuring of discourse sequences to pragmatic connectives; (3) relevance theory, which constitutes a cognitive pragmatic theory, in which no specific principle is associated to linguistic items. However, two main (...) functions to pragmatic connectives can be proposed: the facilitation of inferences, and the access to relevance. The final purpose of this article is to indicate how argumentative effects in discourse can be explained in a cognitively-based pragmatic theory. (shrink)
(1 other version)Why truth matters.Jacques Moeschler -2021 -Pragmatics and Cognition 28 (2):416-440.detailsThis article is about truth and relevance. It first discusses the concept of truth in formal semantics and pragmatics, mainly the Gricean, neo-Gricean and post-Gricean approaches to meaning. What is particularly crucial is the relationship between pragmatic meaning and truth, since, from a Gricean perspective, meaning is defined as non-truth-conditional, which in turn raises the question of how truth can be a pragmatic issue. A second issue is the relationship between truth and relevance, as developed in relevance theory. A third (...) key point is how truth matters as regards the common ground. In order to illustrate how truth is connected to the common ground,bullshit, post-truth, fake newsandliesare discussed, which raise the issue of how truth can be defeated in verbal communication, and mainly how false assumptions can be entertained as true. (shrink)
(1 other version)L’implicite et l’interface sémantique-pragmatique : où passe la frontière?Jacques Moeschler -2018 -Corela. Cognition, Représentation, Langage (HS).detailsLa question de l’interface sémantique-pragmatique est apparue dès le début du tournant gricéen, fondé sur les concepts de signification non naturelle et d’implicature. La question cruciale est devenue celle des critères permettant de définir la signification linguistique et le sens intentionné du locuteur. Dans cet article, nous montrerons quels sont les arguments empiriques qui illustrent la complexité de l’interface sémantique-pragmatique, comme les implicatures conversationnelles généralisées, les explicatures, ou encore la relation entre conditions de vérité et sens pragmatique. Nous discuterons principalement (...) de quatre types de contenus, sémantiques et pragmatiques, en montrant que les critères de l’explicitation et de la négation donnent une première réponse à la question de l’interface sémantique-pragmatique. Des critères supplémentaires permettent de donner une image précise de la complexité de la signification, linguistique et pragmatique, à l’origine de la différence entre la signification conceptuelle et procédurale, mais aussi de la frontière sinueuse sémantique-pragmatique. (shrink)
No categories
The pragmatic aspects of linguistic negation: Speech act, argumentation and pragmatic inference.Jacques Moeschler -1992 -Argumentation 6 (1):51-76.detailsThis paper is an attempt to give a general explanation of pragmatic aspects of linguistic negation. After a brief survey of classical accounts of negation within pragmatic theories , the main pragmatic uses of negation are discussed within relevance theory. The question of the relevance of negative utterance is raised, and a general inferential schema is proposed and tested for the main uses of negation discussed in the paper.
Implicatures.Sandrine Zufferey,Jacques Moeschler &Anne Reboul -2019 - New York, NY: Cambridge University Press. Edited by Jacques Moeschler & Anne Reboul.detailsAn accessible and thorough introduction to implicatures, a key topic in all frameworks of pragmatics. Starting with a definition of the various types of implicatures in Gricean, neo-Gricean and post-Gricean pragmatics, the book covers many important questions for current pragmatic theories, namely: the distinction between explicit and implicit forms of pragmatic enrichment, the criteria for drawing a line between semantic and pragmatic meaning, the relations between the structure of language and its use, the social and cognitive factors underlying the use (...) of implicatures by native speakers, and the factors influencing their acquisition for children and second language learners. Written in non-technical language, Implicatures will appeal to students and teachers in linguistics, applied linguistics, psychology and sociology, who are interested in how language is used for communication, and how children and learners develop pragmatic skills. (shrink)