{"title":"在承诺的空间里好奇地漫步","authors":"Edgar Onea","doi":"10.1515/tl-2020-0005","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The target article by Kamali and Krifka proposes a novel theory of focus and contrastive topic within the framework of Commitment Space Semantics. The key intuitions are similar to some prominent ideas discussed in the literature. Focus in an utterance> signals that the discourse state it updates involves an open question that is congruent to >, as chiefly advocated in Roberts (1996) and Beaver and Clark (2008). Contrastive topic signals that there are additional open questions of a certain type in discourse, as suggested, e. g. in Büring (2003). However, the theory is ontologically more appealing than its competitors because it does not require complicated structures built from questions to explicate notions of information structure such as sets of questions and entire trees of questions; entities whose ontological and logical properties are little understood. Moreover, the way the compositional system is set up is such that all important aspects of the Turkish data (which widely transpose to other discourse-configurational languages such as Hungarian) appear to fall in place very naturally and elegantly. Given my record on information structure, e. g. Velleman et al. (2012) or Onea (2016), I have no choice but to applaud the main ideas of the paper. In fact, this would be an ideal point at which I could stop this comment, as I have nothing of substance to add to the applause. Instead, I ended up intrigued by the properties of the theoretical framework the authors outline in the target article. In the continuation of this paper, I present the insights that I gathered. In particular, in Section 1, I suggest a simpler notation for Commitment Space Semantics that I dub Alternative Commitment Space Semantics (not because it is another theory, but because we need a name for the notational variant). The point of this exercise is to allow simpler comparison to other, more familiar frameworks. In Section 2, I briefly compare Commitment Space Semantics to a particular implementation of Inquisitive Semantics as a framework to represent discourse updates, questions and focus as suggested in Onea (2016). Finally, in Section 3, I make a small observation about the way focus-congruence works in commitment space semantics as compared to Alternative Semantics (Hamblin 1973; Rooth 1992) and question based discourse models following Roberts (1996).","PeriodicalId":46148,"journal":{"name":"Theoretical Linguistics","volume":"46 1","pages":"103 - 111"},"PeriodicalIF":0.6000,"publicationDate":"2020-06-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1515/tl-2020-0005","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"An inquisitive stroll in commitment spaces\",\"authors\":\"Edgar Onea\",\"doi\":\"10.1515/tl-2020-0005\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"The target article by Kamali and Krifka proposes a novel theory of focus and contrastive topic within the framework of Commitment Space Semantics. The key intuitions are similar to some prominent ideas discussed in the literature. Focus in an utterance> signals that the discourse state it updates involves an open question that is congruent to >, as chiefly advocated in Roberts (1996) and Beaver and Clark (2008). Contrastive topic signals that there are additional open questions of a certain type in discourse, as suggested, e. g. in Büring (2003). However, the theory is ontologically more appealing than its competitors because it does not require complicated structures built from questions to explicate notions of information structure such as sets of questions and entire trees of questions; entities whose ontological and logical properties are little understood. Moreover, the way the compositional system is set up is such that all important aspects of the Turkish data (which widely transpose to other discourse-configurational languages such as Hungarian) appear to fall in place very naturally and elegantly. Given my record on information structure, e. g. Velleman et al. (2012) or Onea (2016), I have no choice but to applaud the main ideas of the paper. In fact, this would be an ideal point at which I could stop this comment, as I have nothing of substance to add to the applause. Instead, I ended up intrigued by the properties of the theoretical framework the authors outline in the target article. In the continuation of this paper, I present the insights that I gathered. In particular, in Section 1, I suggest a simpler notation for Commitment Space Semantics that I dub Alternative Commitment Space Semantics (not because it is another theory, but because we need a name for the notational variant). The point of this exercise is to allow simpler comparison to other, more familiar frameworks. In Section 2, I briefly compare Commitment Space Semantics to a particular implementation of Inquisitive Semantics as a framework to represent discourse updates, questions and focus as suggested in Onea (2016). 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引用次数: 0
摘要
Kamali和Krifka的目标文章在承诺空间语义框架下提出了一种新的焦点和对比话题理论。关键的直觉与文献中讨论的一些重要思想相似。话语>中的焦点表明,它更新的话语状态涉及一个与>一致的开放问题,罗伯茨(1996)和比弗和克拉克(2008)主要主张这一点。对比主题表明话语中存在某种类型的额外开放问题,如b ring(2003)所建议的那样。然而,该理论在本体论上比其竞争对手更具吸引力,因为它不需要从问题构建复杂的结构来解释信息结构的概念,如问题集和整个问题树;本体和逻辑属性很少被理解的实体。此外,构建组合系统的方式是这样的,土耳其语数据的所有重要方面(这些数据被广泛地转置到其他话语配置语言,如匈牙利语)似乎非常自然而优雅地落在了适当的位置。鉴于我在信息结构方面的记录,例如Velleman et al.(2012)或Onea(2016),我别无选择,只能为本文的主要思想鼓掌。事实上,这将是一个理想的点,我可以停止这个评论,因为我没有实质内容来补充掌声。相反,我最终被作者在目标文章中概述的理论框架的特性所吸引。在本文的后续部分,我将介绍我收集到的见解。特别是,在第1节中,我为承诺空间语义提出了一种更简单的表示法,我称之为替代承诺空间语义(不是因为它是另一种理论,而是因为我们需要一个表示法变体的名称)。这个练习的重点是允许与其他更熟悉的框架进行更简单的比较。在第2节中,我简要地比较了承诺空间语义与好奇语义的特定实现,作为一个框架来表示Onea(2016)中建议的话语更新、问题和焦点。最后,在第3节中,我对焦点同余在承诺空间语义中的工作方式与替代语义(Hamblin 1973;Rooth(1992)和Roberts(1996)之后的基于问题的话语模型。
The target article by Kamali and Krifka proposes a novel theory of focus and contrastive topic within the framework of Commitment Space Semantics. The key intuitions are similar to some prominent ideas discussed in the literature. Focus in an utterance> signals that the discourse state it updates involves an open question that is congruent to >, as chiefly advocated in Roberts (1996) and Beaver and Clark (2008). Contrastive topic signals that there are additional open questions of a certain type in discourse, as suggested, e. g. in Büring (2003). However, the theory is ontologically more appealing than its competitors because it does not require complicated structures built from questions to explicate notions of information structure such as sets of questions and entire trees of questions; entities whose ontological and logical properties are little understood. Moreover, the way the compositional system is set up is such that all important aspects of the Turkish data (which widely transpose to other discourse-configurational languages such as Hungarian) appear to fall in place very naturally and elegantly. Given my record on information structure, e. g. Velleman et al. (2012) or Onea (2016), I have no choice but to applaud the main ideas of the paper. In fact, this would be an ideal point at which I could stop this comment, as I have nothing of substance to add to the applause. Instead, I ended up intrigued by the properties of the theoretical framework the authors outline in the target article. In the continuation of this paper, I present the insights that I gathered. In particular, in Section 1, I suggest a simpler notation for Commitment Space Semantics that I dub Alternative Commitment Space Semantics (not because it is another theory, but because we need a name for the notational variant). The point of this exercise is to allow simpler comparison to other, more familiar frameworks. In Section 2, I briefly compare Commitment Space Semantics to a particular implementation of Inquisitive Semantics as a framework to represent discourse updates, questions and focus as suggested in Onea (2016). Finally, in Section 3, I make a small observation about the way focus-congruence works in commitment space semantics as compared to Alternative Semantics (Hamblin 1973; Rooth 1992) and question based discourse models following Roberts (1996).
期刊介绍:
Theoretical Linguistics is an open peer review journal. Each issue contains one long target article about a topic of general linguistic interest, together with several shorter reactions, comments and reflections on it. With this format, the journal aims to stimulate discussion in linguistics and adjacent fields of study, in particular across schools of different theoretical orientations.