Puzzles involving anaphora

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Puzzles involving anaphora Jeff peaks phil 43916 October 8, 2014 1 Restrictions on movement.............................. 1 2 Discourse anaphora.................................. 2 3 Donkey anaphora................................... 4 1 Restrictions on movement On the theory we ve been developing, it looks like we would treat the sentence ome man is hungry and he is boring. as having the structure some man e 1 is hungry conj and he 1 is boring This seems to get the right truth conditions for the sentence. To obtain them, we have to think of some man as moving out of the first conjunct of the sentence. This leads us to expect the same behavior from universally quantified expressions; but we don t find this. In fact, sentences like Every man is hungry and he is boring. 1

aren t even grammatical. One might think that the puzzle here is about every. But a plausible case can be made that the puzzle is really about some (and a ). This is based on patterns of wh-movement (the movement of interrogative words) in question formation. Consider the following pairs: John gave me a gift. What did John give me? John gave me a gift and Bob napped. *What did John give me and Bob napped? John gave me a gift which Bob liked. *Who did John give me a gift which liked? The last two examples seem to illustrate constraints on wh-movement: you can t have movement out of conjuncts, or out of relative clauses like which Bob liked. But it also seems like every can t move out of these islands. We already saw an illustration of the point about every and conjunctions. The point about every and relative clauses is illustrated by the pair Fido has a bone in every corner of the house. Fido has a bone which is in every corner of the house. The first, but not the second, seems to be ambiguous. Why is this? Indefinites like some and a, by contrast, can move out of relative clauses. Consider I talked to everyone who was in a dorm on outh Quad. Does this have a reading on which a has wide scope? 2 Discourse anaphora One might think that we can explain these differences between every and a at the level of syntactic theory, via rules governing movement. But indefinites exhibit other, related behaviors which are difficult to account for syntactically. This is that indefinites seem, unlike every, to be able to bind pronouns in different sentences. Compare: (1) A man knocked on my door. He was rude. 2

Can we make sense of the first pair of sentences using our mechanism of movement and quantified noun phrases c-commanding pronouns? One might think that we could handle this case by, in effect, thinking of a discourse, or conversation, as a long conjunctive sentence. Then we could explain the first case above via quantifier movement, treating he in the second sentence as bound. Then, if we posited different rules for the movement of every and a, we would also have an explanation for the ungrammaticality of *Every man left. He was in a hurry. But in other cases the conjunction + binding strategy gives the wrong truth-conditions. Consider the following example from Gareth Evans (1980): (2) Exactly one man drank champagne. He was ill. Does this have the truth conditions which would be assigned to the tree exactly one man e 1 drank champagne conj and he 1 was ill by our theory? Here he seems to be in some way anaphoric on exactly one man, but not bound by it. Let s consider two different theoretical options for handling sentences like (2). 1. The definite description theory. One idea is that he in (2) is functioning as a definite description, and that which definite description it expresses depends on the expression it is anaphoric on. Here it might be the man who drank champagne. This appears to give us a way to understand the sense in which an expression might be anaphoric but not simply functioning as a bound variable (or as inheriting the semantic value of a c-commanding NP). But does this give the right truth conditions for (1)? To develop this theory, we would need to give systematic rules for determining which definite description should give us the interpretation of the pronoun. 2. Dynamic semantics. Dynamic semantic theories are theories according to which the semantic values of expressions depend in unexpected ways on earlier 3

features of the discourse. Here s one way in which this idea might help with donkey anaphora. (For more details on competing dynamic approaches, see the extra reading on the web site by Jeff King.) One sort of theory of this kind takes (1) at face value, and says that the occurrence of he in the second sentence is unbound. o the discourse on this view would have the form [ [a man][e 1 knocked on my door]][ he 2 was rude] The idea is then that the unbound pronoun he 2 gets its semantic value from the sentence which precedes it. Informally we can think of this sentence as setting the value of subsequent free variables to be the set of things which make the first sentence true, and that the second sentence is true if one of these things makes it true. Note also that this seems to give the right treatment of cases like (2). 3 Donkey anaphora Both of these theories face problems handling another problematic kind of sentence: (3) Every farmer who owns a donkey beats it. Our theory so far leads us to expect that every farmer who owns a donkey and a donkey are quantifier phrases, and that it is bound by the latter. But there are two problems with this. The first is that it is hard to see how a donkey could c-command it. For it looks like a donkey is something like a constituent of the common noun which is part of the first quantifier phrase, meaning that our tree will look something like Det every N c farmer who owns a donkey e 1 beats it 2 However we interpret the complex N c, a donkey is not going to c-command the pronoun. One might try to solve this problem by letting a donkey take wide scope, giving us the following tree: 4

NP 2 Det N c a donkey Det every N c farmer who owns e 2 e 1 beats it 2 Here the requirement of c-command is met. But does this give the right truth-conditions for (3)? The problem here is in a way twofold. First, to get the right truth-condition, we have to say that a here means the same as every but this seems completely unprincipled. econd, if we take a here to express universal quantification, the idea that it has wide scope conflicts with the principle (discussed earlier) that universal quantifiers cannot scope out of relative clauses. There is some controversy about what the correct truth conditions for (3) are. The two plausible candidates are: The universal reading: Every farmer who is such that s/he owns a donkey beats every donkey that s/he owns. The existential reading : Every farmer who is such that s/he owns a donkey beats at least one donkey that s/he owns. The problem is that there appears to be no principled way to derive either truth-condition as the truth-condition of (3). Let s now try out the two views discussed in the previous section to see whether they can help here. uppose first that we treat it as expressing a definite description. The obvious choice here would be something like the donkey he owns. Would this give us the correct truth conditions for (3)? Dynamic approaches fare better and indeed were developed partly to handle sentences like this. One treatment of this sentence parallels the treatment of (1) and (2) discussed above, in that it treats the sentence as involving free variables. One approach would be to treat the sentence as a conditional of the form [ [every farmer] [if e 1 owns a donkey, then e 1 beats it 2 ]] 5

where the pronoun is unbound. We might then hold that conditionals are governed by the following rule: the antecedent outputs a set of sequences of objects which make the antecedent true (intuitively, the set of pairs of objects such that the first is a farmer, the second is a donkey, and the first owns the second). The conditional as a whole is true if every such sequence also makes the consequent true. This delivers the universal reading of (3). But what about the existential reading? This question can t be dismissed, because there are sentences which are apparently of the same form as (3) but which only have the existential reading. King gives the example Every man who had a credit card paid with it. How would you modify the above sketch of a dynamic account to handle this? Does the modification run into other problems? Another problem for this sort of treatment of pronouns as free variables whose value is given by the discourse, which King points out, is that it seems to say the wrong thing about discourses like (4) A man broke into arah s apartment. cott believes he came in the window. The problem is that in some settings it is clear that the second sentence attributes to cott a general belief about whoever came in the window rather than a belief about that particular individual. Can you see how the dynamic approach we have been discussing might have trouble with that? That suggests that the definite description theory mentioned above, even if it cannot provide an adequate treatment of donkey sentences, may still have a role to play. References Gareth Evans, 1980. Pronouns. Linguistic Inquiry 11(2):337 361. 6