The calendar below provides information on the course's lecture (L) and review (R) sessions.
Table for CalendarL1 | - Overview
- Meaning
- Grice on Non-natural Meaning
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L2 | - Concepts of Meaning
- Circularity/Holism
- Truth-Conditions
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L3 | - More on Truth-Conditions
- Meta-language vs. Object Language
- Semantic Properties of Sentences
- Some Obvious Shortcomings of Truth-Conditional Semantics (Slang, Honorifics)
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L4 | - Truth-Conditions
- Propositional Logic
- Truth-Tables
- The Connectives
| Problem set 1 due |
L5 | - Tautologies, Contradictions
- De Morgan's Laws
- The Material Conditional
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L6 | - The Material Conditional (cont.), as an analysis of "if"
- Initial Plausibility
- "Paradoxes"
- Pragmatic Inferences
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L7 | - Pragmatic Inferences (cont.)
- Sentence (Truth-Conditional) Meaning vs. Speaker Meaning
- "I'm not hungry"
- Grice's Maxims of Conversation
- Quantity Implicatures
- Pragmatic Strengthening of "possible" (from Portner's Book)
| Problem set 2 due |
L8 | - Gricean Quantity Implicatures (cont.)
- Reasons to prefer a Pragmatic Approach over an Ambiguity Approach
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L9 | - Gricean Quantity Implicatures (cont.)
- Applied to Strengthening of "some" and "or" (Truth-Conditionally: Inclusive, Pragmatically Strengthened to Exclusive)
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R1 | Review Session 1 | |
L10 | Gricean Story about "or" again | Problem set 3 due |
L11 | Supplementing Material Conditional Truth-Conditions for "if" with Pragmatic Inferences | |
L12 | - Problems for the analysis of "if" as Material Conditional + Pragmatic Implicatures
- New Topic: Compositionality
- Analyzing "Sheila barks"
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L13 | - Proper names have as their semantic value individuals
- Predicates have as their semantic value sets of individuals, or functions from individuals to truth-values
- Brief Discussion of Vagueness
| Problem set 4 due |
L14 | - Transitive Predicates (Functions from Individuals to Functions from Individuals to Truth-Values)
- Function Application as the Main Semantic Composition Principle
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L15 | - The Lambda-notation for Specifying Functions
- Order of Arguments
- First Introduction to Relative Clauses
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L16 | - Review of Semantic System
- Different kinds of Transitivity Alternations, Implicit Arguments
- Informal Discussion of Relative Clauses
| Problem set 5 due |
L17 | - Relative Clauses
- Gaps, Variables, Fillers
- Predicate Abstraction
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L18 | - Example Calculation: "Shelby is smart"
- Modifiers
- Predicate Modification
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L19 | - "smart dog" vs. "smart person"
- Perhaps, adjectives are not one-place predicates but functions from one-place predicates to one-place predicates
- Other Interesting Cases of Adjectives: "alleged murderer", "canine genius"
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L20 | - Perhaps, adjectives are one-place predicates after all, but context-dependent ones
- "Pauline is a tall horse"
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L21 | - Definite NPs
- "The" as a function from one-place predicates to individuals
- Partial function only defined for predicates that are true of exactly one individual
- Presuppositions
- The "King of France"
| Problem set 6 due |
L22 | Quantifiers | |
L23 | - Natural Language Quantifiers
- Compared to Predicate Logic Quantifiers
- The Meaning of "most"
- Negative Polarity Items
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L24 | - Negative Polarity Items (cont.)
- Licensing by Quantifiers in position of Downward Monotonicity (the Fauconnier-Ladusaw Hypothesis)
| Problem set 7 due |
L25 | - Frege vs. Russell on the meaning of "the"
- Attributive vs. Referential Uses of Definite Descriptions
- Pragmatic analysis of the two uses of Definite Descriptions
| Squib topic due |
L26 | - Review of the analysis of "the killer of the black cat" (from problem set)
- More on Referential vs. Attributive
| Problem set 8 due |
L27 | - Tense
- Semantic Values Relative to a Time of Evaluation
- The Past Tense
- Existential Quantification or Referential?
- Partee's Example "I didn't turn off the stove"
- Also: "Last month, I went for a hike"
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R2 | Review Session 2 | |
L28 | More on the Past Tense and whether it is Referential or involves Existential Quantification (Contextually Restricted) | |
L29 | - Aspectual Classes: States, Activities, Achievements, Accomplishments
- Instants vs. Intervals
- Accomplishments are only true of Intervals
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L30 | - "The World of Sherlock Holmes"
- Shifting the World of Evaluation
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L31 | Modals | Squib due |
R3 | Review Session 3 | |
L32 | - Conditionals again
- The Strict Implication Analysis
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L33 | - Conditionals again (cont.)
- Stalnaker's Definite Analysis
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