Language, Logic, and Meaning: USEM 40a Spring 2006
Language, Logic, and Meaning: USEM 40a Spring 2006
Meaning
USEM 40a
Spring 2006
James Pustejovsky
Causal Theory
Names are socially inherited from a chain of uses going
back to a grounding.
Kinds of Denotation
Proper Names denote individuals
Common nouns denote sets of
individuals
Verbs denote actions
Adjectives denote properties of
individuals
Adverbs denote properties of actions
Structure of Utterance
Individual Word Meanings
Lexical Semantics
Word meanings in combination
Compositional Semantics
Necessary and Sufficient
Conditions
double
Meaning and the lexicon
Componential analysis
bachelor = [+male, -married, +adult]
Sense relations
related meaning
Language and truth-
conditions
Weve considered two definitions of
semantics: (i) what linguistic forms
encode and (ii) truth conditions
Both are ways to get at the invariant
meaning of a sentence.
(Sentence meaning, as opposed to
utterance meaning)
Language and Truth-
Conditions
We will continue to treat a sentence as
having truth conditions
Enables discussion of semantic
knowledge
paraphrase, contradiction, entailment
Connects linguistic meaning to the
world
But truth depends also on context
Propositions
A sentence has truth conditions
equivalently, it conveys propositional
content
A proposition has a truth value (T or F)
It is a statement that certain truth
conditions hold
Often thought of as a state of affairs in
the world
Propositions
A proposition is usually expressed as the
meaning of a sentence:
The Red Sox won the World Series last
year.
That sentence contains nine words. (Sentence)
That sentence is true (Proposition)