Plurals and Events (Current Studies in Linguistics),Used

Plurals and Events (Current Studies in Linguistics),Used

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Barry Schein proposes combining a secondorder treatment of plurals with Donald Davidson's suggestion that there are positions for reference to events in ordinary predicates in order to account for several of the more puzzling features of plurals without invoking "plural objects," with its attendant metaphysics, and also provide an absolute truththeoretic characterization of the semantics of sentences with plurals in them.How do we make sense of sentences with plural noun phrases in them? In Plurals and Events, Barry Schein proposes combining a secondorder treatment of plurals with Donald Davidson's suggestion that there are positions for reference to events in ordinary predicates in order to account for several of the more puzzling features of plurals without invoking "plural objects," with its attendant metaphysics, and also provide an absolute truththeoretic characterization of the semantics of sentences with plurals in them. Schein's highly original argument should have significant impact on how naturallanguage semantics is done, with repercussions for philosophy and logic. The book opens with foundational arguments that the logical language should have four major features: reduction to singular predication via a Davidsonian logical form, amereology of events, a logical syntax that allows the constituents of a Davidsonian analysis to be predicated of distinct events and separated from one another by other logical elements, and descriptive anaphors that crossrefer to the events described by antecedent clauses. A semantics for plurality and quantification is developed in the remaining chapters, which address some of the empirical and formal questions raised by the variety of interpretations in which plurals and quantifiers participate.

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