Choice and prohibition in non-monotonic contexts

Disjunctions in the scope of possibility modals give rise to a conjunctive inference, generally referred to as ‘free choice.’ For example, Emma can take Spanish or Calculus suggests that Emma can take Spanish and can take Calculus. This inference is not valid on standard semantics for modals in combination with a Boolean semantics for disjunction. Hence free choice has sparked a whole industry of theories in philosophy of language and semantics. This paper investigates free choice in sentences involving a non-monotonic modified numeral, under which we embed a possibility modal scoping over disjunction. One example is Exactly one student can(not) take Spanish or Calculus . As we point out, the presence (or absence) of certain readings of these sentences is a key test for a prominent approach, which analyzes free choice as a kind of scalar implicature. We report on two experiments investigating the readings of such sentences, using an inferential task. Our results are challenging for the implicature approach. We sketch two possible solutions within this approach, either adopting a different recent implicature algorithm, or exploring a different meaning for modified numerals with exactly . Both of them suffer from a variety of problems. We then discuss a third solution, which exploits a recent account of free choice based on homogeneity. This approach can account for our results, in combination with plausible assumptions about homogeneity projection, though it too has open issues with related cases. Regardless of which solution is chosen, non-monotonic contexts turn out to be an important test case for theories of free choice, implicature, and modified numerals.

[1]  Emmanuel Chemla,et al.  Experimental Evidence for Embedded Scalar Implicatures , 2011, J. Semant..

[2]  Hans Kamp,et al.  IV—Free Choice Permission , 1974 .

[3]  D. Fox Free Choice and the Theory of Scalar Implicatures , 2007 .

[4]  Fred Landman,et al.  Plurals and Maximalization , 1998 .

[5]  T. Zimmermann Free Choice Disjunction and Epistemic Possibility , 2000 .

[6]  Stephen Crain,et al.  Children's Knowledge of Free Choice Inferences and Scalar Implicatures , 2016, J. Semant..

[7]  Nicole Gotzner,et al.  The Scalar Inferences of Strong Scalar Terms under Negative Quantifiers and Constraints on the Theory of Alternatives , 2018, J. Semant..

[8]  Benjamin Spector,et al.  Global positive polarity items and obligatory exhaustivity , 2014 .

[9]  Jacopo Romoli,et al.  Probability and implicatures: A unified account of the scalar effects of disjunction under modals , 2017 .

[10]  Nathan Klinedinst,et al.  The symmetry problem: current theories and prospects , 2018 .

[11]  Benjamin Spector Aspects of the Pragmatics of Plural Morphology: On Higher-Order Implicatures , 2007 .

[12]  A. Kratzer,et al.  Indeterminate Pronouns: The View from Japanese , 2017 .

[13]  Danny Fox,et al.  Economy and embedded exhaustification , 2018 .

[14]  Hans Kamp,et al.  Free Choice Permission , 2013 .

[15]  Jacopo Romoli,et al.  Filtering free choice , 2019 .

[16]  E. Chemla Universal Implicatures and Free Choice Effects: Experimental Data , 2009 .

[17]  Paolo Santorio,et al.  Alternatives and Truthmakers in Conditional Semantics , 2018 .

[18]  Luis Alonso-Ovalle,et al.  Disjunction in Alternative Semantics , 2010 .

[19]  Lewis Bott,et al.  Processing inferences at the semantics/pragmatics frontier: Disjunctions and free choice , 2014, Cognition.

[20]  D. Fox Cancelling the Maxim of Quantity: Another challenge for a Gricean theory of Scalar Implicatures , 2014 .

[21]  D. Fox,et al.  Scalar implicatures of embedded disjunction , 2015 .

[22]  Michael Franke,et al.  Quantity implicatures, exhaustive interpretation, and rational conversation , 2011 .

[23]  Benjamin Spector,et al.  Interpreting plural predication: homogeneity and non-maximality , 2020, Linguistics and Philosophy.

[24]  Jacopo Romoli,et al.  Homogeneity or implicature: An experimental investigation of free choice , 2019 .

[25]  Corien Bary,et al.  Temporal anaphora across and inside sentences: The function of participles , 2011 .

[26]  Manuel Kriz,et al.  Aspects of homogeneity in the semantics of natural language , 2015 .

[27]  Lucas Champollion,et al.  Two switches in the theory of counterfactuals , 2018, Linguistics and Philosophy.

[28]  G. Chierchia,et al.  Logic in Grammar: Polarity, Free Choice, and Intervention , 2013 .

[29]  Giorgio Magri A theory of individual-level predicates based on blind mandatory scalar implicatures , 2009 .

[30]  Danny Fox,et al.  Universal Free Choice and Innocent Inclusion , 2017 .

[31]  Simon Goldstein,et al.  Free choice and homogeneity , 2019 .

[32]  Mandy Simons,et al.  Semantics and Pragmatics in the Interpretation of "or" , 2005 .

[33]  E. Chemla,et al.  Two methods to find truth-value gaps and their application to the projection problem of homogeneity , 2015 .

[34]  Roni Katzir,et al.  Structurally-defined alternatives , 2007 .