Russellian and Strawsonian definite descriptions in situation semantics

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Abstract

In this paper I give two alternatives for representing the definite descriptions-Russellian and Strawsonian approaches realized in situation semantics. I show how the Russellian treatment of the definites can be made "referential", while preserving its original generalized quantifier mode. The Strawsonian representation is substantially referential with presuppositional effect of the restriction imposed over the parametric representative of the potential referent of the definite description. The situation theoretical restricted parameters, speakers' reference functions in particular contexts of utterances, and the notion of a resource situation for evaluating NPs are the key formal tools used. This work does not reject any of the two accounts in favor of the other, but shows how both approaches give better results in a theory which models partiality of the linguistic information, discourse dependency and in particular, speakers' references. In both approaches, the prototypical definite NPs get appropriate "parametric" interpretations.

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Loukanova, R. (2001). Russellian and Strawsonian definite descriptions in situation semantics. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 2004, pp. 69–79). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-44686-9_6

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