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Presupposition

      Conclusion                                Introduction
      with
      Q&A




                                                Types of
Antipresupposition                              Presupposition

                         Outline


   Location &
   Projection problems
                                            Theories of
                                            Presupposition
Speakers assume certain information is
   already known by their listeners.
This is part of what is communicated but
                 not said.
   Presuppositions and entailments
 Two aspects of what is communicated
             but not said
Presupposition: The information that a
speaker assumes to be already known.
(The Cambridge Encyclopaedia of Language, 1987)
Implicit meanings conveyed by the speaker through
the use of particular words.
Ex: "The Cold War has ended" presupposes that the
existence of the entities it refers to, in this case the
"Cold War".
Speakers, not sentences,
 have presuppositions
 A presupposition is a condition which must be
  fulfilled in order for an expression to make sense
 A presupposition is introduced by a lexical element
  or construction called the presupposition trigger
 A presupposition:
   Is a background belief, mutually assumed by the
    speaker and the addressee for the utterance to be
    considered appropriate in context
   Survives when the utterance is negated, questioned
    or embedded in an attitude context
   Is triggered by a lexical item or a grammatical
    construction in the utterance
TYPES OF PRESUPPOSITION

Presuppositions are associated with the use of a
large number of words, phrases and structures.

These linguistic forms are considered as indicators
of potential presupposition, which can only become
actual presupposition in contexts with speakers.
Existential Presupposition

Entities named by the speaker and assumed to be
present
- NP.
- Possessive constructions
“Rahat’s car is new” we can presuppose that
Rahat exists and that he has a car.

Some lexical triggers:
   Definite NPs:
      The student fell asleep.
      The student didn’t fall asleep
      Atif is a bachelor (Atif is an unmarried male person)
Factive Presupposition

Identified by the presence of some verbs such as "know“,
"realize“, “be glad”, “be sorry”, etc.
Some lexical triggers:
  Factive verbs:
      Lawrence realized Rana ate a sandwich.
      Rana regretted eating a sandwich.
      Rana liked eating a sandwich.
      I was aware of the class cancellation on Saturday
      They announced the winner of the contest.
      She didn’t realize that she was ill.
Lexical Presupposition
In using one word, the speaker can act as if another
meaning will be understood. For instance:

Mary stopped running. (>>He used to run.)
You are late again. (>> You were late before.)
Are you still such a bad driver? (>> You were a bad driver)


"stop“, "again“ “still” are taken to presuppose another
(unstated) concept.
Some lexical triggers:
        Change of state verbs:
        Rana stopped eating a sandwich (at 2pm).
        Rana started eating a sandwich (at 2pm).
        Verbs of judgment:
        Lawrence blamed Rana for eating the sandwich.
        Lawrence faults Rana for eating the sandwich.
Structural Presupposition

It is the assumption associated with the use of certain
structures.
- wh-question constructions.

When did she travel to the USA? ( >> she travelled)

Where did you buy the book? (>> you bought the book)

The listener perceives that the information presented is
necessarily true, or intended as true by the speaker..
Non-factive presupposition
it is an assumption referred to something that is not
true.
For example, verbs like "dream", "imagine" and
"pretend" are used with the presupposition that what
follows is not true.

I dreamed that I was rich. (>> I was not rich)

We imagined that we were in London. (>> We were
not in London)
Counterfactual presupposition

It is the assumption that what is presupposed is not
only untrue, but is the opposite of what is true, or
contrary to facts.

-conditional structures,

If you were my daughter, I would not allow you to do
this. ( >> you are not my daughter)
If I were rich I would buy a Ferrari (>> I’m not rich)
Theories of Presupposition
 Presupposition as a property of sentences
   under this view, presupposition is part of linguistic meaning
   therefore, it is a “semantic” phenomenon


 Presupposition as speaker belief
   under this view, a presupposition is something believed to be true
    by the speaker, as part of a communicative act
   therefore, it’s a “pragmatic” phenomenon
The semantic view
 Essentially, tries to account for presupposition as a
 truth relation

 p presupposes q if:
   when p is true, so is q
   when p is false, q is still true
   when q is true, p could be either true or false


 This allows us to view presupposition on a par with
 other relations like entailment
The semantic view
 Accounts for the difference between entailment and
 presupposition in a truth-conditional way

 Presupposition:
   If p is false, q is still true
     My wife went to Karachi presupposes I have a wife
     My wife didn’t go to Karachi still presupposes I have a
       wife
 Entailment:
   If p is false, then the entailment false
     I saw Arif this morning  I saw someone this morning
     I didn’t see Arif this morning -/-> I saw someone this
       morning.
Problem 1: presupposition failure
 Under the semantic view, we would have to say that
  presupposition failure results in falsity of a sentence:

     The King of France is bald.
     Presupposes that there is one and only one king of France
     Fact: there is no King of France
     Therefore: sentence is false

 We could try to analyse presupposition differently:
   e.g. If q is false, then p is not false, but dubious

 But do we want to claim that existence and uniqueness are
  part of the meaning of the definite description?
Pragmatic solution to Problem 1
 Under this approach, existence/uniqueness are not
 part of the semantics of definite (cf our earlier
 discussion of reference).

  they are viewed as conventions on the use of such
   expressions:
    If a speaker uses a definite, this presupposes that there
     is some unique entity that the listener can identify

  If the convention is violated, this doesn’t render the
   sentence false, but infelicitous. It’s not a lack of truth, but
   a failure of the pragmatic conventions
Problem 2: Presupposition triggers and
                    context

 She cried before going out.
   Presupposes: She went out


 She died before going out.
   Does not presuppose: She went out


 If presupposition is so sensitive to context, can it be
 part of the expression meaning?
The pragmatic reply
 Presuppositions are defensible:

  They are conventionally carried by certain
   expressions

  Speakers are conscious of the presuppositions
   their utterances carry

  But in some contexts, they are simply defeated
   or cancelled
Some more on the pragmatic theory

 Influential exponents include Stalnaker (1974):
   Suggested that when people communicate, they have a
    common ground (CG)

   This is a background set of assumptions that they both
   make, and know to be true

   Presupposition works against this common ground


   Felicitous use of an utterance requires that its
   presuppositions be commonly held by all interlocutors
Dealing with new presuppositions
 It’s a fact about communication that not everything
 we presuppose is known to our interlocutor
  A: My dog died.
  B: Didn’t know you had one.


 Ways out:
  we can ask for clarification
  sometimes, we don’t because the presupposition is
   quite clear and obvious
  We just adopt it.
Accommodation
 Lewis (1979) suggested that interlocutors carry out
 Accommodation:

 If at time t something is said that presupposes p,
 but p is not presupposed (not in common ground),
 then, all other things being equal, p is introduced in
 the common ground.
Accommodation example

Speaker A (to B):
The guy who murdered my cat was really insane.
 They’ve now put him in an asylum.

 Suppose B didn’t know my cat was murdered.
   The definite description the guy who murdered my cat
    presupposes that there is one person who was the
    murderer of my cat
   B can accommodate this, by assuming that it’s true and
    is now part of common ground
 How to locate
   Where, When & Why
 Projection
   Projection problems
 Elements that introduce presuppositions are called

 presupposition triggers
   Factive verb
      Shakeel regrets that she cooked the rice.

   Phase change verbs
      Azam stopped smoking.

   It-cleft construction
      It was Mohsin who chased the thief.

   Pseudo-clefts
      What Mphil group brought in the classroom was a bottle of Pepsi.
Iterative adverbs
    Younas had fed up to do Mphil, again.
Additive particles
    Naqvi had observed the phenomenon of language, too.
Definite descriptions
    My dog had the flu.
Certain quantifiers
    Dr Shehzad welcomed all the delegates from Oxford University.
 Presuppositions are somehow independent of the

  conventional meaning and entailments expressed by a
  sentence

 Can be distinguished from entailments via various

  presupposition tests

 All tests involve some modification of the original

  sentence that changes the conventional meaning in
  some respect – what is left unaffected is a candidate for a
  presupposition
Negation
  Presuppositions are not affected by negation
  Sentential negation affects the conventional meaning (truth) of a
  sentence, but leaves presuppositions untouched
  e.g.
  Azam did not stop smoking.
  It was not Atif who ate all chocolate cookies.
  My dog does not have the flu.
Modals
 Presuppositions are not affected by modals
 Modals affect the modality of a sentence, i.e. its epistemic/
 deontic /etc. status, but leave presupposition untouched
 E.g.
 Khan might regret that she cooked the rice.
 Perhaps Dr. Shehzad welcomed all delegates from the
 Oxford University
Questions
  Presuppositions are not affected by question formation
  Question formation affects the speech act (an assertion is
  changed to a question), but leave presuppositions
  untouched
  e.g.
  Does Shakeel regret that she cooked the rice?
  Has Azam stopped smoking?
 Presupposition projection refers to the fact that larger
    constituents containing presupposition triggers inherit
    their presuppositions in certain way
   Shakeel started to learn Italian.
   Atif hopes that Shakeel started to learn Italian.
   Azam hopes that Shakeel started to learn Italian and he
    thinks of meeting him.
   All inherit the presupposition triggered by started. But
   Azam claims that Shakeel started to learn Italian.
   If Shakeel did not learn Italian before, he started to learn
    Italian.
   Do not presuppose that Shakeel did not learn Italian
    before (the moment of utterance).
PROJECTION PROBLEM


   In many cases presuppositions don’t survive to
     become the meaning of complex sentences.
                       Why?
        They are “destroyed” by entailments
The entailments are more powerful of presuppositions
PROJECTION PROBLEM

Examples:

The unicorn is waiting in the garden.
   #Yet there are no unicorns.
   Entailment problem
Pat knows that the unicorn is waiting in the garden.
   #Yet there are no unicorns.
   Again entailment problem
 An antipresupposition, like a presupposition,
  survives to negation….
 An antipresupposition may be cancelled
 An antipresupposition is triggered by a lexical
  form, which is compared with a presuppositon
  trigger.
 A. A son of Shakeel’s is intelligent.
 B. The son of Shakeel’s is intelligent.
 Scale with presupposed contents: a < the
 A is an antipresupposition trigger / the is a
  presupposition trigger
 Some sentences impose the condition that the
 interlocutors not take the truth of a certain proposition for
 granted (Percus, 2006):

   Either it will have to e taken for granted that the proposition in
    question is false,

   Or it will have to be an open issue whether the proposition is true
    or not.
In these cases, we might say that the sentence antipresupposes the
proposition in question.
Raheel thinks that Saba has a knowledge of cooking.
Antipresupposes via <think, know>:
Arif is repairing a chair in Azam’s living room.
Antipresupposes via <a, the>:
Azam has exactly one chair in his living room
Azhar assigned the same exercise to all of Adnan’s students.
Antipresupposes via <all, both>:
Adnan has exactly two students.
Presupposition
Presupposition

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Presupposition

  • 1.
  • 2.
  • 3. Presupposition Conclusion Introduction with Q&A Types of Antipresupposition Presupposition Outline Location & Projection problems Theories of Presupposition
  • 4. Speakers assume certain information is already known by their listeners. This is part of what is communicated but not said. Presuppositions and entailments Two aspects of what is communicated but not said
  • 5. Presupposition: The information that a speaker assumes to be already known. (The Cambridge Encyclopaedia of Language, 1987) Implicit meanings conveyed by the speaker through the use of particular words. Ex: "The Cold War has ended" presupposes that the existence of the entities it refers to, in this case the "Cold War".
  • 6. Speakers, not sentences, have presuppositions
  • 7.  A presupposition is a condition which must be fulfilled in order for an expression to make sense  A presupposition is introduced by a lexical element or construction called the presupposition trigger
  • 8.  A presupposition:  Is a background belief, mutually assumed by the speaker and the addressee for the utterance to be considered appropriate in context  Survives when the utterance is negated, questioned or embedded in an attitude context  Is triggered by a lexical item or a grammatical construction in the utterance
  • 9. TYPES OF PRESUPPOSITION Presuppositions are associated with the use of a large number of words, phrases and structures. These linguistic forms are considered as indicators of potential presupposition, which can only become actual presupposition in contexts with speakers.
  • 10. Existential Presupposition Entities named by the speaker and assumed to be present - NP. - Possessive constructions “Rahat’s car is new” we can presuppose that Rahat exists and that he has a car. Some lexical triggers: Definite NPs: The student fell asleep. The student didn’t fall asleep Atif is a bachelor (Atif is an unmarried male person)
  • 11. Factive Presupposition Identified by the presence of some verbs such as "know“, "realize“, “be glad”, “be sorry”, etc. Some lexical triggers: Factive verbs: Lawrence realized Rana ate a sandwich. Rana regretted eating a sandwich. Rana liked eating a sandwich. I was aware of the class cancellation on Saturday They announced the winner of the contest. She didn’t realize that she was ill.
  • 12. Lexical Presupposition In using one word, the speaker can act as if another meaning will be understood. For instance: Mary stopped running. (>>He used to run.) You are late again. (>> You were late before.) Are you still such a bad driver? (>> You were a bad driver) "stop“, "again“ “still” are taken to presuppose another (unstated) concept. Some lexical triggers: Change of state verbs: Rana stopped eating a sandwich (at 2pm). Rana started eating a sandwich (at 2pm). Verbs of judgment: Lawrence blamed Rana for eating the sandwich. Lawrence faults Rana for eating the sandwich.
  • 13. Structural Presupposition It is the assumption associated with the use of certain structures. - wh-question constructions. When did she travel to the USA? ( >> she travelled) Where did you buy the book? (>> you bought the book) The listener perceives that the information presented is necessarily true, or intended as true by the speaker..
  • 14. Non-factive presupposition it is an assumption referred to something that is not true. For example, verbs like "dream", "imagine" and "pretend" are used with the presupposition that what follows is not true. I dreamed that I was rich. (>> I was not rich) We imagined that we were in London. (>> We were not in London)
  • 15. Counterfactual presupposition It is the assumption that what is presupposed is not only untrue, but is the opposite of what is true, or contrary to facts. -conditional structures, If you were my daughter, I would not allow you to do this. ( >> you are not my daughter) If I were rich I would buy a Ferrari (>> I’m not rich)
  • 16. Theories of Presupposition  Presupposition as a property of sentences  under this view, presupposition is part of linguistic meaning  therefore, it is a “semantic” phenomenon  Presupposition as speaker belief  under this view, a presupposition is something believed to be true by the speaker, as part of a communicative act  therefore, it’s a “pragmatic” phenomenon
  • 17. The semantic view  Essentially, tries to account for presupposition as a truth relation  p presupposes q if:  when p is true, so is q  when p is false, q is still true  when q is true, p could be either true or false  This allows us to view presupposition on a par with other relations like entailment
  • 18. The semantic view  Accounts for the difference between entailment and presupposition in a truth-conditional way  Presupposition:  If p is false, q is still true  My wife went to Karachi presupposes I have a wife  My wife didn’t go to Karachi still presupposes I have a wife  Entailment:  If p is false, then the entailment false  I saw Arif this morning  I saw someone this morning  I didn’t see Arif this morning -/-> I saw someone this morning.
  • 19. Problem 1: presupposition failure  Under the semantic view, we would have to say that presupposition failure results in falsity of a sentence:  The King of France is bald.  Presupposes that there is one and only one king of France  Fact: there is no King of France  Therefore: sentence is false  We could try to analyse presupposition differently:  e.g. If q is false, then p is not false, but dubious  But do we want to claim that existence and uniqueness are part of the meaning of the definite description?
  • 20. Pragmatic solution to Problem 1  Under this approach, existence/uniqueness are not part of the semantics of definite (cf our earlier discussion of reference).  they are viewed as conventions on the use of such expressions:  If a speaker uses a definite, this presupposes that there is some unique entity that the listener can identify  If the convention is violated, this doesn’t render the sentence false, but infelicitous. It’s not a lack of truth, but a failure of the pragmatic conventions
  • 21. Problem 2: Presupposition triggers and context  She cried before going out.  Presupposes: She went out  She died before going out.  Does not presuppose: She went out  If presupposition is so sensitive to context, can it be part of the expression meaning?
  • 22. The pragmatic reply  Presuppositions are defensible:  They are conventionally carried by certain expressions  Speakers are conscious of the presuppositions their utterances carry  But in some contexts, they are simply defeated or cancelled
  • 23. Some more on the pragmatic theory  Influential exponents include Stalnaker (1974):  Suggested that when people communicate, they have a common ground (CG)  This is a background set of assumptions that they both make, and know to be true  Presupposition works against this common ground  Felicitous use of an utterance requires that its presuppositions be commonly held by all interlocutors
  • 24. Dealing with new presuppositions  It’s a fact about communication that not everything we presuppose is known to our interlocutor  A: My dog died.  B: Didn’t know you had one.  Ways out:  we can ask for clarification  sometimes, we don’t because the presupposition is quite clear and obvious  We just adopt it.
  • 25. Accommodation  Lewis (1979) suggested that interlocutors carry out Accommodation: If at time t something is said that presupposes p, but p is not presupposed (not in common ground), then, all other things being equal, p is introduced in the common ground.
  • 26. Accommodation example Speaker A (to B): The guy who murdered my cat was really insane. They’ve now put him in an asylum.  Suppose B didn’t know my cat was murdered.  The definite description the guy who murdered my cat presupposes that there is one person who was the murderer of my cat  B can accommodate this, by assuming that it’s true and is now part of common ground
  • 27.  How to locate  Where, When & Why  Projection  Projection problems
  • 28.  Elements that introduce presuppositions are called presupposition triggers  Factive verb  Shakeel regrets that she cooked the rice.  Phase change verbs  Azam stopped smoking.  It-cleft construction  It was Mohsin who chased the thief.  Pseudo-clefts  What Mphil group brought in the classroom was a bottle of Pepsi.
  • 29. Iterative adverbs Younas had fed up to do Mphil, again. Additive particles Naqvi had observed the phenomenon of language, too. Definite descriptions My dog had the flu. Certain quantifiers Dr Shehzad welcomed all the delegates from Oxford University.
  • 30.  Presuppositions are somehow independent of the conventional meaning and entailments expressed by a sentence  Can be distinguished from entailments via various presupposition tests  All tests involve some modification of the original sentence that changes the conventional meaning in some respect – what is left unaffected is a candidate for a presupposition
  • 31. Negation Presuppositions are not affected by negation Sentential negation affects the conventional meaning (truth) of a sentence, but leaves presuppositions untouched e.g. Azam did not stop smoking. It was not Atif who ate all chocolate cookies. My dog does not have the flu.
  • 32. Modals Presuppositions are not affected by modals Modals affect the modality of a sentence, i.e. its epistemic/ deontic /etc. status, but leave presupposition untouched E.g. Khan might regret that she cooked the rice. Perhaps Dr. Shehzad welcomed all delegates from the Oxford University
  • 33. Questions Presuppositions are not affected by question formation Question formation affects the speech act (an assertion is changed to a question), but leave presuppositions untouched e.g. Does Shakeel regret that she cooked the rice? Has Azam stopped smoking?
  • 34.  Presupposition projection refers to the fact that larger constituents containing presupposition triggers inherit their presuppositions in certain way  Shakeel started to learn Italian.  Atif hopes that Shakeel started to learn Italian.  Azam hopes that Shakeel started to learn Italian and he thinks of meeting him.  All inherit the presupposition triggered by started. But  Azam claims that Shakeel started to learn Italian.  If Shakeel did not learn Italian before, he started to learn Italian.  Do not presuppose that Shakeel did not learn Italian before (the moment of utterance).
  • 35. PROJECTION PROBLEM In many cases presuppositions don’t survive to become the meaning of complex sentences. Why? They are “destroyed” by entailments The entailments are more powerful of presuppositions
  • 36. PROJECTION PROBLEM Examples: The unicorn is waiting in the garden. #Yet there are no unicorns. Entailment problem Pat knows that the unicorn is waiting in the garden. #Yet there are no unicorns. Again entailment problem
  • 37.  An antipresupposition, like a presupposition, survives to negation….  An antipresupposition may be cancelled  An antipresupposition is triggered by a lexical form, which is compared with a presuppositon trigger.  A. A son of Shakeel’s is intelligent.  B. The son of Shakeel’s is intelligent.  Scale with presupposed contents: a < the  A is an antipresupposition trigger / the is a presupposition trigger
  • 38.  Some sentences impose the condition that the interlocutors not take the truth of a certain proposition for granted (Percus, 2006):  Either it will have to e taken for granted that the proposition in question is false,  Or it will have to be an open issue whether the proposition is true or not.
  • 39. In these cases, we might say that the sentence antipresupposes the proposition in question. Raheel thinks that Saba has a knowledge of cooking. Antipresupposes via <think, know>: Arif is repairing a chair in Azam’s living room. Antipresupposes via <a, the>: Azam has exactly one chair in his living room Azhar assigned the same exercise to all of Adnan’s students. Antipresupposes via <all, both>: Adnan has exactly two students.