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Presupposition ??

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Title: Presupposition ??


1
Presupposition??
  • Professor Shaozhong Liu, Ph.D. (Pragmatics) /
    Ph.D. (Higher Education)
  • College of Foreign Studies, Guilin University of
    Electronic Technology
  • Homepage www.gxnu.edu.cn/Personal/szliu
  • Blog cyrusliu.blog.163.com
  • Email shaozhong_at_hotmail.com

2
Objectives and SLOs
  • 1) Objectives
  • To familiarize students with the concept
  • To illustrate it with examples
  • To discuss its role in Pragmatics
  • 2) Student learning outcomes (SLOs)
  • Be able to define the concept
  • Be able to use examples to illustrate the concept
  • Be able to speak and write with presuppositions.

3
3 sentence types in human language
  • Declaratives (declarative sentences) typically
    functioning as statements in other words, in
    declaring something, we state something. E.g.
  • 1) You run away.
  • Which is structurally analyzed as
  • Subject Verb(al phrase)

4
  • Imperatives (imperative sentences) typically
    functioning as commands in other words, in
    utterings an imperative, we give a command or
    order someone to do something. Different from
    declaratives, imperatives have no subject
    present, though it is understood as you.
    E.g.
  • 2) Run away!
  • Which is structurally analyzed as
  • (Subject implied you the hearer) Verb(al phrase)

5
  • Interrogatives (interrogative sentences)
    typically functioning as questions, which fall
    under two forms, general and special, with the
    former answerable with yes or no and the
    latter begun with wh- words and answerable with
    specific information. E.g.
  • 3) Did you run away?
  • 4) Why did you run away?
  • Pedagogically, general questions are more fit for
    developing beginners L2 competence while special
    questions are more productive in generating L2
    competence in intermediate-advanced learners.

6
Distinguish sentence types
  • 1) Abraham Lincoln is the current president of
    the USA.
  • 2) The Eiffel Tower is in Paris.
  • 3) A car is an automobile.
  • 4) Have a cookie.
  • 5) Be careful of the crumbs.
  • 6) Where was Abraham Lincoln born?
  • 7) How much did the car cost?
  • 8) Did you get a look at my face when I took your
    purse?

7
Sentence types and meaning understanding one
effort, 2 tools.
  • Inference is absolute, though its effort varies
    in terms of levels of sentence difficulty and who
    the inferer is.
  • 2 tools for the inferring effort entailing and
    presupposing
  • Sentences may entail various meanings, but its
    people who read the entailments judge, interpret,
    and assign the actual meaning.
  • Sentences may presuppose meanings (propositions),
    but its people who read the presuppositions
    judge, interpret and assign the actual meaning.

8
  • Entailments are limited to declaratives or
    statements, whose understanding depends on 1) our
    semantic knowledge, and 2) our worldly knowledge.
  • If the entailments match with our above
    knowledge, they are true if not, false. Hence,
  • 1) My mother is a woman. (Is semantically true)
  • 2) My mother is a doctor. (Can be true and false,
    depending on what is happening in the world.)

9
  • Sentences like my mother is a doctor and did
    you get a good look at my face when I took your
    purse? are syntactically different (being of
    different structural types) but semantically
    associate with concrete situations or realities.
    Put another way, they need to be processed with
    our worldly knowledge, hence the term
    truth-value or truth-conditional value, which
    goes like this if it matches with the reality,
    it is true otherwise, false.

10
  • Necessity to introduce the presupposition tool
  • the entailments of a sentence are other
    sentences which automatically true if the
    original sentence is true. However, . Only
    declarative sentences can be true or false.
    Does this mean that we cannot draw some very
    strong inferences from utterances based on
    imperative and interrogative sentences? (Peccei,
    1999/2000,p.18)
  • Regardless of sentence types, which is a
    perspective of understanding, the subsequent
    examples all contain inferences obvious to make

11
  • 1) Where has Faye looked for the keys?
  • --? Faye has looked for the keys.
  • 2) Did you buy this awful wine?
  • --? This wine is awful.
  • 3) Dont sit on Annies sofa.
  • --? Annie has a sofa.
  • 4) Stop being lazy.
  • --? You are being lazy.
  • 5) Lucy knows that George is a crook.
  • --? George is a crook.
  • ALL THESE OBVIOUS INFERENCES ARE EASY TO MAKE,
    BECAUSE THE ORIGINAL PRESUPPOSES THE LATTER!

12
Presupposition
  • Since not all utterances consist of full
    declarative sentences, presupposition can be a
    useful concept when analyzing speaker meaning.
    (Peccei, 1999/2000, p.19)
  • Broad and speaker-oriented definition
    Presupposition is anything the speaker assumes
    to be true before making the utterance. (Peccei,
    1999/2000, p.19)
  • Narrow and sentence-oriented definition
    Presupposition is a necessary precondition for
    the sentence to be true.

13
  • In many discussions of the concept,
    presupposition is treated as a relationship
    between two propositions. If we say that the
    sentence in a contains the proposition p and the
    sentence in b contains the proposition q, then,
    using symbol .. To mean presupposes, we can
    represent the relationship as in c
  • a. Marys dog is cute. ( p)
  • b. Mary has a dog. (q)
  • c. p gtgt q
  • (Yule, 1996/2000, p.26)

14
  • Interestingly, when we produce the opposite of
    the sentence by negating it (NOT p), we find
    that the relationship of presupposition doesnt
    change. That is, the same proposition q continues
    to be presupposed by NOT p, as shown below
  • a. Marys dog isnt cute. ( NOT p
  • b. Mary has a dog. ( q)
  • NOT p gtgt q
  • This property of presupposition is generally
    described as constancy under negation. Basically,
    it means that the presupposition of a statement
    will remain constant (i.e. still true) even when
    that statement is negated. (Yule, 1996/2000, p.26)

15
  • Pecceis definition Presupposition is an
    inference about what is assumed to be true in
    the utterance rather directly asserted to be
    true. (Peccei, 1999/2000, p.19)
  • Lius definition Presupposition logical
    meaning of a sentence or meanings logically
    associated with or entailed by a sentence. (Liu,
    2000 2011)
  • Hence
  • Annie has a sofa directly asserts Annie has a
    sofa.
  • Dont sit on Annies sofa presupposes Annie
    has a sofa. (Peccei, 1999/2000, p.19)

16
Presupposition triggers
  • Presupposition triggers words and structures
    that seem to suggest an assumed meaning or
    linking relationship. E.g.
  • Mike might find the chocolate cake in the
    kitchen. / Mike might find a chocolate cake in
    the kitchen.
  • Is Mike giving Annie that chocolate cake? / Is
    Mike giving Annie a chocolate cake?
  • Did Mike hide a chocolate cake? / Did Mike hide
    Annies chocolate cake?
  • What differences are there between the 3 pairs of
    sentences?

17
  • What we notice is that in each of those
    utterances the noun cake is part of a larger noun
    phrase. The words the, that, this, these, those,
    and possessives like Annies, my, your, etc. make
    it a definite noun phrase and trigger this very
    basic kind of presupposition. (Peccei,
    1999/2000, p.20)
  • Notice that possessives lead to a particularly
    strong presupposition about the existence of the
    chocolate cake, and in addition lead to the
    presupposition that Annie has a chocolate cake.
    This basic type of presupposition is sometimes
    called an existential presupposition. (Peccei,
    1999/2000, p.20)

18
  • Verbal triggers regret, pretend, stop
  • 1) Steve regrets buying a dog -? Steve bought a
    dog.
  • 2) Meridyth pretends shes a rock star.
    -?Meridyth is not a rock star.
  • 3) Ed should stop eating raw oysters. -? Ed eats
    raw oysters.
  • The use of regret in (1) triggers the
    presupposition that what follows is fact.
    (Others verbs that can behave like this are know,
    realize, discover, find out, etc. As well as
    constructions like Im aware that and its
    strange that ) (p.22)

19
  • The use of pretend in (2) triggers the
    presupposition that what follows is fiction.
    (Other verbs that can behave like this are
    imagine and dream and constructions like If I
    were as in If I were the Prime Minister, Id
    ban presuppositions.) (p.22)
  • The use of stop in (3) triggers the
    presupposition that the action was going on
    before. (Other verbs that can behave like this
    are continue and keep. On the other hand, start
    and begin can presuppose that the action was not
    going one before.)

20
Presupposition use in real life
  • Youll want DomeBeGone, my revolutionary cure
    for baldness.
  • My revolutionary cure lurk several dubious
    propositions which are simply assumed to be true
  • There is a cure for baldness.
  • The cure is revolutionary.
  • I have this cure. (Peccei, 1999/2000, p.21)

21
  • Presupposition is widely and most effectively
    present in persuasive language, such as courtroom
    and advertising.
  • Advertisers are not allowed to directly assert
    claims about their products or their competitors
    for which they have no evidence. However they can
    generally get away with making indirect
    assertions via presupposition. More examples in
    Ex.3.8 and 3.10.
  • In the courtroom, where the stakes are much
    higher than in advertising, lawyers examining
    witnesses are often not allowed to make an
    indirect assertion via presupposition, unless it
    has been established by previous evidence.
    (Peccei, 1999/2000, p.21) More examples in Ex.
    3.7 and 3.9.

22
  • Wh-words like when, why, how, etc. can trigger
    supposition both when they are used to ask a
    question and when they introduce a subordinate
    clause. E.g.
  • 1) When did Mike smash the television?
  • 2) Why did Mike smash the television?
  • 3) I was eating popcorn when Mike smashed the
    television.
  • 4) I dont understand why Mike smashed the
    television.
  • 5) I wonder how Mike smashed the television.

23
Types of presupposition
  • Potential presuppositions refer to a large
    number of words, phrases, and structures that
    speakers use to assume things and that can only
    become actual presuppositions in contexts with
    speakers. (Yule, 1996/2000, p.27) (though Peccei
    (1999/2000, 22) asserts that presuppositions can
    be drawn even when there is little or no
    surrounding context.)

24
  • Existential presuppositions Refer to the use of
    possessives that are associated with a
    presupposition of existence. By using any of the
    expressions as in below, the speaker is assumed
    to be committed to the existence of the existence
    of the entities named
  • The King of Sweden, the cat, the girl next door,
    the Counting Crows
  • Yule (1996/2000, p.27)

25
  • Factive presuppositions Refers to presupposed
    information following a verb like know
    (realize, regret, be aware, odd, glad) suggesting
    a fact. E.g.
  • a. Everybody knows that John is gay. (p)
  • b. Everybody doesnt know that John is gay. (NOT
    p)
  • c. John is gay. ( q)
  • d. p gtgt Q NOT p gtgt q
  • e. She didnt realize he was ill. (gtgtHe was ill)
  • f. We regret telling him. (gtgt We told him)
  • g. I wasnt aware that she was married. (gtgt She
    was married)
  • h. It isnt odd that he left early. (gtgt He left
    early)
  • i. Im glad that its over. (gtgt Its over)

26
  • Lexical presuppositions Refer to the use of one
    form with its asserted meaning conventionally
    interpreted with the presupposition that another
    (non-asserted) meaning is understood. E.g.
  • Each time you say that someone managed to do
    something, the asserted meaning is that the
    person succeeded in some way. When you say that
    someone didnt manage, the asserted meaning is
    that the person did not succeed. In both cases,
    however, there is a presupposition (non-asserted)
    that the person tried to do that something. So,
    managed is conventionally interpreted as
    asserting succeeded and presupposing tried.
    (Yule, 1996/2000, p.28)
  • a. He stopped smoking. (gtgt He used to smoke)
  • b. They started complaining. (gtgtThey werent
    complaining before)
  • c. Youre late again. (gtgt You were late before)

27
  • In the case of lexical presupposition, the
    speakers use of a particular expression is taken
    to presuppose another (unstated) concept, whereas
    in the case of a factive presupposition, the use
    of a particular expression is taken to presuppose
    the truth of the information that is after it.
    (Yule, 1996/2000, p.28)

28
  • Structural presuppositions Refer to the case
    that certain sentences structures have been
    analyzed as conventionally and regularly
    presupposing that part of the structure is
    already assumed to be true. For example, the
    wh-question construction in English is
    conventionally interpreted with the
    presupposition that the information after the
    wh-form is already known to be the case. (Yule,
    1996/200o, pp.28-29)
  • a. When did he leave? (gtgt He left)
  • b. Where did you buy the bike? (gtgt You bought the
    bike)

29
  • Non-factive presuppositions Refer to
    presuppositions introduced by verbs like dream,
    imagine, and pretend, etc. that are assumed
    not to be true. E.g.
  • a. I dreamed that I was rich. (gtgt I was not rich)
  • b. We imagined we were in Hawaii. (gtgt We were not
    in Hawaii)
  • c. He pretends to be ill. (gtgt He is not ill)

30
  • Counter-factual presuppositions Refer to
    structures whose presuppositions are not only
    true, but are opposite of what is true, or
    contrary to facts.
  • A conditional structure of the type below,
    generally called a counterfactual conditional,
    presupposes that the information in the if-clause
    is not true at the time of utterance. E.g.
  • If you were my friend, you would have helped me.
    (gtgtYou are not my friend)

31
Presupposition as pragmatic strategy and
presuppositional competence development
  • Peccei, p.23
  • Ex. 3.7 In each case assume that the judge has
    sustained an objection to the question. What
    presupposition(s) might have been objected to?
  • Ex. 3.9 Try your hand at being a tricky lawyer.
    Write some questions that attempt to sneak in the
    following facts via presupposition. Heres a
    sample question for The defendant drove his car
    into a shop window Did you brake before you
    drove your car into the shop window? Notice how
    if the defendant just answers the question,
    either Yes or No, he accepts the truth of the
    presupposition and admits that he drove his car
    into the shop window.

32
  • Ex. 3.8 In each of the following advertisement
    extracts, what claim or claims are being made by
    presupposition rather than directly asserted?
    (The names have been changed to protect the
    innocent.)
  • Ex. 3.10 Try your hand at being a tricky
    advertiser. Below are completely unsubstantiated
    claims about various products. For each one,
    write a line of advertisement that slips in the
    claims via presupposition. For the purposes of
    this exercise use full sentences. Your sentences
    can be declaratives, interrogatives or
    imperatives. In fact, you will find
    interrogatives and imperatives particularly
    useful in some cases.

33
Summary
  • Presuppositions are inferences that are very
    closely linked to the words and grammatical
    structures actually used in the utterance, but
    they come from our knowledge about the way
    language users conventionally interpret these
    words and structures. (Peccei, 1999/2000, p.19)

34
  • Presuppositions are inferences about what is
    assumed in an utterance rather than directly
    asserted.
  • Presuppositions are closely related to the words
    and grammatical structures that are actually used
    in the utterance and our knowledge about the way
    language users conventionally interpret them.
  • Presuppositions can be drawn even when there is
    little or no surrounding context. (Peccei,
    1999/2000. p. 22)

35
  • Entailment vs. presupposition
  • An entailment is something that logically
    follows from what is asserted in the sentence.
    Sentences, not speakers, have entailments.
    (Yule, 1996/2000, p.25)
  • A presupposition is something the speaker
    assumes to be the case prior to making an
    utterance. Speakers, not sentences, have
    presuppositions. (Yule, 1996/2000, p.25)

36
Further readings
  • Leech, G. (1981). Semantics. (Chapter 14).
    Penguin Harmondsworth.
  • Simpson, P. (1993). Language, Ideology and Point
    of View. (Chapter 5). London Routledge.
  • Yule, G. (1996). Pragmatics. (pp.99-100) Oxford
    Oxford University Press.
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