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English Pages 466 [468] Year 1987
Argumentation: Perspectives and Approaches
Studies of Argumentation in Pragmatics and Discourse Analysis (PDA) This series contains reports on original research in both pragmatics and discourse analysis. Contributions from linguists, philosophers, logicians, cognitive psychologists, and researchers in speech communication are brought together to promote interdisciplinary research into a variety of topics in the study of language use. In this series several kinds of studies are presented under headings such as 'Argumentation', 'Conversation' and 'Interpretation'. Editors Frans Η. van Eemeren Rob Grootendorst University of Amsterdam Department of Speech Communication
Argumentation: Perspectives and Approaches Proceedings of the Conference on Argumentation 1 9 8 6
Frans Η. van Eemeren Rob Grootendorst J. Anthony Blair Charles A. Willard (eds.)
1987 FORIS PUBLICATIONS Dordrecht-Holland/Providence-U.S.A.
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Contents
Introduction
1
PRAGMATIC APPROACHES 1 2 3 4 5
6
7 8 9
Marina Sbisä Acts of Explanation: A Speech Act Analysis 7 Robert L. Benjamin Utterance and Commitment: A Speech Act Analysis 19 Barbara Kryk The Problem of Deixis in Argumentation 27 Gisele Losier Argumentative Linguistic Analysis and Refutative Discourse 36 Antoinette Primatarova-Miltscheva Sequences with Concessive, Adversative, and Restrictive Sentences and Clauses and The Simulation of Dialogical Argumentation Patterns in Monological Discourse 43 Daniel Carroll, Anne-Marie Simon-VandenBergen and Sonia Vandepitte Mood and Modality in Political Interviews 53 Lita Lundquist Towards a Procedural Analysis of Argumentative Operators in Texts 61 Frans Η. van Eemeren and Tjark Kruiger Identifying Argumentation Schemes 70 Läszlo I. Komlosi and Elisabeth Knipf Negotiating Consensus in Discourse Interaction Schemata 82
CONVERSATIONAL APPROACHES 10 Mike Allen, Nancy Burrell and Paul Mineo Evaluating Definitions of Argument: Expert and Naive 93 11 Olga Kunst Gnamus Argumentation and Persuasion 103 12 Henk Pander Maat Arguer Goals and the Termination of Dialogical Arguments 13 Johannes Schwitalla Common Argumentation and Group Identity 119
110
VI
14 Marcel Μ.Η. Bax On the Impact of Involvement: The Expressive Encoding of Value Judgements and the Projection of Agreement in the Context of Conversation 127 15 Agnes Verbiest Confrontation in Conversations. An Approach of Conversational Discussions Based on the Theory of Van Eemeren and Grootendorst and on Conversational-Analytical Insights of Jackson and Jacobs 136 16 Pamela J. Benoit Orientation to Face in Everyday Argument 144 COGNITIVE A N D EMPIRICAL APPROACHES 17 E.P. Brandon Deductive Reasoning Ability, Error, and Education 155 18 H.P. van Ditmarsch Applications of Abstraction in Argumentation 162 19 Jean Caron and Josiane Caron-Pargue Towards a Psycholinguistic Approach of Argumentative Operators: The ' Thinking A loud' Procedure 170 20 Marcelo Dascal, Varda Dascal and Erika Landau The Art of Moving and the Art of Proving 179 21 Paul-Ludwig Völzing Some Remarks on the Development of Argumentation 187 22 Mary Louise Willbrand A Pragmatic Perspective for Investigating Reason Giving Across Ages and Situations 196 23 Renee A. Meyers and David R. Seibold Interactional and Non-Interactional Perspectives on Interpersonal Argument: Implications for the Study of Group Decision-Making 205 24 William L. Benoit and James J. Lindsey Argument Fields and Forms of Argument in Natural Language 215 25 Dale Hample and Judith M. Dallinger The Judgement Phase of Invention 225 RHETORICAL PERSPECTIVES 26
Paul D. Brandes The Relationship between Argument and Evidence in Aristotle's toric 237 27 Alan Brinton Ethotetic Argument: Some Uses 246 28 Lawrence J. Prelli and Roger Pace Stasis, Good Reasons, and the Small Group 255 29 Donka Alexandrova Rhetoric and the Theory of Argumentation 266
Rhe-
vii
30 Christopher Tindale and Leo Groarke Logic and Rhetoric: Groundwork for a Synthesis 274 31 Livio Rossetti How to Make a Paradox out of Something Lacking Paradoxical Qualifications - With Examples 283 32 A. Kibedi Varga Some Questions about the Rhetorical Analysis of Literary Texts 289 33 Peter van der Zwaal Psychoanalysis and Classical Rhetoric 295 EPISTEMOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES 34 Charles E. Caton Is There an Epistemic Theophrastean Rule for Actual Arguments? 305 35 Steve Fuller and Charles Willard In Defense of Relativism: Rescuing Incommensurability from the SelfExcepting Fallacy 313 36 James Gasser Argumentation in Proof 321 37 Harald Wohlrapp Toulmin's Theory and the Dynamics of Argumentation 327 38 William D. Fusfield 'The Rules of Argumentation Aren't Validfor Me'... Either! An Additional Refutation of Wolfgang Kuhlmann's Attempted Transcendental-Pragmatic Final-Grounding of Ethics and Epistemology 336 39 Alan G. Gross The First Copernican: Rational Conversion as a Model for Scientific Change 347 40 John Furlong Rationality, Cognitive Science, and the Theory of Argumentation 357 41 P.J. van den Hoven The External Justification of a Dialectical Concensus 364 42 Mark L. Weinstein Reason and the Theory of Argument 372 43 William E. Murnion The Self-Corrective Process of Learning 381 44 Michael Astroh The Implicit Teleology of Human Communication and Experience 389 45 Norbert Gutenberg Argumentation and Dialectical Logic 397 FORMAL PERSPECTIVES 46 Denis Apotheloz Logical and Non-Logical Foundations of Argumentation 47 John E. Nolt Dilemmas of the Inductive/Deductive Distinction 418
407
viii
48
Lorenzo Pena Dialectical Arguments, Matters of Degree, and Paraconsistent Logic 426 49 Richard Hirsch Interactive Argumentation: Ideal and Real 434 50 Mark A. Brown Inference Rules for Generalized Quantifiers 442 List of Contributors
451
Introduction Frans Η. van Eemeren, Rob Grootendorst, J. Anthony Blair and Charles A. Willard
A great many students of argumentation assembled in June 1986 in the Netherlands to attend the first International Conference on Argumentation of the University of Amsterdam. The Conference was called to cultivate the interdisciplinary study of argumentation and its applications. Its aim was to bring together argumentation scholars from around the world to listen to each other, to talk together, and in general to increase the exchange of ideas about argumentation. The three volumes in the series Studies of Argumentation, constitute the record of its formal presentations. The papers contained in these three volumes are certainly a mixed offering. They represent differences in disciplines, divergencies among research traditions, and cultural differences. By no means do they make up a unified body of knowledge. The conference's aim was to stimulate the flow of discourse across the main boundaries, not in the hope that one or another particular tradition would eventually subordinate the others but in the hope that cross-boundary communication among these traditions would strengthen them all. These Proceedings, as was the Conference, are truly international in scope. Europe is represented by scholars from Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Denmark, Finland, France, Great-Britain, Greece, Holland, Hungary, Italy, Poland, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, West Germany and Yugoslavia; other continents, by contributors come from Israel and Morocco, Canada, the United States and the West Indies, and Australia - in fact, some 60 percent of the more than 150 papers read at the Conference were flown in, and as far as quantity goes the English-speaking world clearly outweighed the plurilingual Continentals. The geographical diversity of the theorists represented in these volumes is exceeded by the range of their intellectual backgrounds. There are philosophers and linguists, logicians and rhetoricians, speculative theorists and empirical researchers, generalists and specialists - and some who are all of these combined. Many work in Speech or Communication, or Philosophy departments, others came from institutes for educational research and development, colleges of Arts and Sciences, Psychology laboratories, and schools of Language or Social Studies (or their local equivalents). These scholars cultivate a striking diversity of disciplines, and favour a wide variety of professional organizations and movements, ranging from the American Forensic Association (AFA) and the Association for Informal Logic and Critical Thinking (AILACT) on one side of the Atlantic, to, for example, the Centre Europeen pour l'Etude de l'Argumentation (CEEA) and the International Centre for the Study of Argumentation (SICSAT), on the other. As well, many theorists not committed to any organization or manifesto play a major role. The Conference objective of drawing different scholars together was clearly
2 successful. Its goal of stimulating the exchange of ideas and insights was sought by a programme which embodied as many aspects of argumentation theory as possible. Thus, the programme had several sections, each representing either a theoretical perspective on argumentation or a major topic of study by argumentation scholars. Those papers which were suitable for publication have been included in these Proceedings of the Conference. As a result, these volumes contain a smorgasbord: something for everyone. Although the merits of other arrangements: by country of origin, or by different traditions, are undoubted, their demerits are equally obvious. We have chosen to arrange the papers thematically - more or less according to the broad outlines of the Conference programme - in order to capture by their juxtaposition in the Proceedings the exchange of ideas that occurred at the Conference when scholars from different countries and traditions rubbed shoulders in the same section of the programme. The Proceedings are divided into three volumes. The papers read by the invited speakers, which have a more general interest for argumentation theory, are assembled in the first: Argumentation: Across the Lines of Discipline. The main themes which are already to be found in this volume, are elaborated on in the second and third volumes. Argumentation: Perspectives and Approaches stresses the theoretical aspects and Argumentation: Analysis and Practices the more practical ones. Argumentation: Across the Lines of Discipline, opens the trilogy. Its first three sections draw different perspectives on the study of argumentation. In (7) Logical and Dialectical Perspectives, are the papers by the philosophers and logicians Scriven, Barth, Johnson, Govier, Lorenz and Taha. They are joined, in (//) Rhetorical and Epistemological Perspectives, by their rhetorically and epistemologically oriented colleagues - Finocchiaro, Cox, Wenzel, Geissner, Meyer, Goodnight, Willard, Airaksinen and Parret. With ( I I I ) Pragmatic and Conversational Perspectives, are added the papers of the linguists and language philosophers - Kopperschmidt, Blair, van Eemeren, Jackson, Jacobs, Kline, Trapp & Yingling & Wanner, and Fogelin. The reward for this crisscrossing of disciplinary borders may well be the relocation of the boundary lines. In any case, the reader is given fair warning by this volume's title. Across the Lines of Discipline applies also to the last two sections of volume one, where the focus is on specific topics of argumentation studies. (IV) Argumentation Analysis, Evaluation and Fallacies, group together papers by Kienpointner, Hitchcock, William Benoit, Krabbe, McKerrow, Walton, Grootendorstand Woods, and (V) Applications of Argumentation Theory, contains the work of Vedung, Rieke, Tirkkonen-Condit, Paul, Weddle, and Hoaglund. In these two sections the authors deal with similar problems in the study of argumentation, but approach them with various intellectual backgrounds and from diverse starting-points. Argumentation: Perspectives and Approaches, the second volume, contains the papers which seem to relate most naturally to the three theoretical perspectives of volume one, but they have been subdivided further and ordered differently. Thus, corresponding to section III of volume one ('Pragmatic and Conversational Perspectives') are in volume two: (I) Pragmatic Approaches, with papers by Sbisä,
3 Benjamin, Kryk, Losier, Primatarova-Miltscheva, Carroll & Simon-VandenBergen & Vandepitte, Lundquist, van Eemeren & Kruiger, and Komlosi & Knipf; (II) Conversational Approaches, containing papers by Allen & Burrell & Mineo, Gnamus, Pander Maat, Schwitalla, Bax, Verbiest, and Pamela Benoit; and (77/) Cognitive and Empirical Approaches, which includes the papers of Brandon, van Ditmarsch, Caron & Caron-Pargue, Dascal & Dascal & Landau, Völzing, Willbrand, Meyers & Seibold, Benoit & Lindsey, and Hample & Dallinger. Relating to section / / o f volume one ('Rhetorical and Epistemological Perspectives'), volume two contains (IV) Rhetorical Perspectives, containing the papers of Brandes, Brinton, Prelli & Pace, Alexandrova, Tindale & Groarke, Rossetti, Varga and van der Zwaal; and ( V ) Epistemological Perspectives, with the contributions of Caton, Fuller & Willard, Gasser, Wohlrapp, Fusfield, Gross, Furlong, van den Hoven, Weinstein, Murnion, Astroh and Gutenberg. The closing section of the second volume, (VI) Formal Perspectives, with papers by Apotheloz, Nolt, Pena, Hirsch and Brown, corresponds most closely to the first section of volume one ('Logical and Dialectical Perspectives'). Argumentation: Analysis and Practices - volume three - collects the papers corresponding to the second part of volume one (IV 'Argumentation Analysis, Evaluation and Fallacies' and V 'Applications of Argument Theory'). Thus there is, first, (/) Argumentation Evaluation, with papers by Ulrich, Grennan, Fisher and Schellens, and (II) Fallacies, containing the papers of Rohatyn, Wreen, Biro and Maier. Second, there are four sections of papers on applying argumentation theory. (Ill) Legal Argumentation, includes papers on argument and law by Hynes Jr., Dellapenna & Farreil, Soeteman, Waaldijk, Seibert, Henket, Buchanan, Riley & Hollihan & Freadhoff, and Camp. (IV) Special Fields, covers different kinds of argumentation practices, varying from moral and aesthetic argumentation to argument in international organization, with papers by Garver, Manning, Bailin, Hudson, Brownlee, Berube, Tarnay, Zappel, Hazen and Walker. (V) Case studies, contains analyses of such specific argumentations as those concerning the SaccoVanzetti trial, the 1982 Falklands/Malvinas war, and job interviews, with papers by Bruner, Simon-VandenBergen, Kaehlbrandt, Fiordo, Schuetz, Williams, KakkuriKnuuttila, Smit, Adelswärd and Futrell. Lastly, in (VI)Education in Argumentation, there are collected papers concerned with the teaching of argumentation by Nolen, Siegel, Langsdorf, Makau, Marshall, Norris & Ryan, and Collison. Each volume, Across the Lines of Discipline, Perspectives and Approaches and Analysis and Practices, is a valuable collection in its own right. Of course, these books can be read independently of one another, but just one or another alone will not suffice to get a good picture of the state of the art in argumentation theory. For that purpose, one has to read all of them. Their interconnectedness then, no doubt, becomes more distinct. This would already be a good result for the study of argumentation, for although falling short of the cross-fertilization and even the fusing of disciplines which are some argumentation theorists' dreams of the future, such an understanding is an indispensable starting-point for co-operation in the further development of argumentation theory, which is exactly the main goal of the International Society for the Study of Argumentation (ISSA), founded at the end of the Amsterdam Conference. These three Argumentation volumes are the first step in realizing this goal.
Pragmatic Approaches
1
Acts of Explanation: A Speech Act Analysis Marina Sbisä
Many linguistic moves, both in discourse and in conversation, are endowed with an explanatory function.
But it is difficult, if not
impossible, to define such a function once and for all. rather that a number of
It seems
features, belonging to the communicative
situation, the linguistic context, the linguistic form and content of the act of explanation, may to varying degrees cooperate to make a certain speech act count as the explanation of something. The present work has not established notion of explanation. all
those
speech
"explanations." the Italian
a priori
limits to the
Its approach has been to take into account
acts
that
people
are
prepared
to
call
Of course, the investigation has been undertaken in
language and on Italian
texts; therefore, it is the
common usage and understanding of the Italian words corresponding to "explain" ("spiegare") and "explanation" provided the guidelines for this work. entries
"explain"
and
("spiegazione") which have
However, a comparison of the
"explanation,"
and
"spiegare"
and
"spiegazione" respectively, in some English and Italian dictionaries suggests that the notions in question do not differ significantly in the two languages. and magazines
But as for the examples, taken from
textbooks
(a number of examples from dialogues in television
serials have been examined but not quoted in this paper), it may well be the case that Italian textbooks and magazines differ from English and American ones with regard to the kinds of explanations they contain. Two kinds of things will be examined clearly
that are often considered as explanations
in some detail:
(i) speech act
exhibit an explanans-explanandum
sequences
that
relationship, and
(ii)
speech acts and/or speech act sequences that are metacommunicatively presented as explanations.
8 1.
A clear and relatively
explanandum
relationship
simple way to describe the explanansis proposed
by G.H. Von Wright.
He
distinguishes between: (i)
causal explanation, in which the explanans expounds either a
sufficient or a necessary condition of the state of affairs or event to be explained. (ii)
This is typical of the physical sciences.
teleoloqical explanation, in which the explanans expounds the
goal of the behavior
to be explained.
This
is typical
of
the
explanation of action. (iii)
quasi-causal
explanation, in which the explanans expounds
some circumstance that is related, although not nomically, state of affairs, event or behavior to be explained.
to the
It can be
found in historical explanations. (iv)
quasi-te1eologica1
explanation,
in which
the
explanans
expounds some effect with respect to which the state of affairs or event to be explained
is a necessary condition.
It is typical of
the biological sciences. The
presence
explanandum markers
are
in a text
relationships used:
of one
or more of
is apparent when
e.g. "because,"
these
explanans-
specific
linguistic
"in order
to,"
"so
that."
However, explanans and explanandum may be connected by the simple coordinative conjunction "and," or even by an appropriate punctuation
(full stop, colon).
use of
In these cases, the explanatory
value of the speech act or speech act sequence will be evident only if the explanans-explanandum
relationship turns out to be relevant
to textual cohesion or to the appropriateness of one or more of the related speech acts. an
analysis
of
the
The discussion of two examples will show that explanans-explanandum
relationships
made
according to the categories proposed by von Wright may be useful, but that in actual discourse these relationships are usually rather complicated, or even ambiguous. (1)
"(a) se si continuerä a perdere e molto nelle raffinerie, per un lungo periodo, (b) sarä sempre piu difficile avere le risorse finanziarie per fare i necessari investimenti nella ricerca di petrolio. (c) Questo e per me un motivo di grandissima preoccupazione, (d) perche fino alia fine del secolo avremo bisogno di petrolio in quantita simile a quello che consumiamo oggi. (e) Ε ogni anno il costo per trovare un barile di petrolio aumenta m o l t i s s i m o . ( f r o m an i n t e r v i e w to the P r e s i d e n t of the Ente Nazionale Idrocarburi, L'Espresso, March 24, 1985).
9 Here, there are two linguistic markers of explanation, "uti motivo di" (connecting (a) and (b) as an explanans to (c) as an explanandum); and "perche" (connecting (c) as an explanandum to (d) and (e) as an explanans).
Thus, (c) seems to be explained twice, but only the
former explanation tion.
has a clear status as a quasi-causal
Should we consider
explanans
(a),
(b),
(d) and
(of the quasi-causal kind)?
explana-
(e) as one
complex
In this case, (d) and
(e)
would not be directly connected to (c), but their conjunction would quasi-causally explain the fact that the causal relationship between (a) and (b) quasi-causally explains (c). (2)
(a) La guerra (b) mise a nudo tutta la debolezza della nazione: (c) mancavano armi, vestiti, scarpe, vagoni e carri per le truppe; non vi erano sufficienti scorte alimentari, (d) e la gente moriva di fame e di s t e n t i . 2 (from a history textbook).
Here,
we
find
a colon
explanation markers.
and
Thus,
the
conjunction
(c) and
with respect to assertion (a)-(b):
"e" as
potential
(d) may count as an explanans
they explain how the weakness of
the nation referred to (the Russian Empire before the revolution) was made evident.
Other explanation relationships can also be found
in this passage:
(a) is causally related to (b), and
Intuitively, revealed.
(c) to (d).
(a) explains why the weakness of Russia was
suddenly
As for (c) and (d), the actual presence of a relationship
of explanation depends on the topic which the reader
is
focusing
attention on.
If we focus attention on people dying, (c) causally
explains
If we focus attention on the conditions of
(d).
described
by
(c),
life
(d) illustrates or exemplifies their gravity.
Here, as in other examples examined in this paper, the text contains a network
of potential explanans-explanandum
relationships, which
may give rise to actual explanations depending upon the that it is relevant for the receiver to ask. the relationshisp between
(a)-(b) and
questions
Notice, moreover, that
(c)-(d) is not reducible
any one of the relationships described by von Wright:
to
therefore,
his typology is not an exhaustive one for the purposes of discourse analysis. 2.
One of the reasons why a typology of explanations of the kind
proposed by von Wright is not exhaustive, is that it does not take into account those explanations, which consist of clarification of meaning.
This, however,
is a complex
field,
which
includes
10
definitions language),
of
the
meaning
clarification
of
linguistic
expressions
(in a
of meaning in context, more detailed or
easier paraphrases, exemplifications (which may be endowed with the function
of
justifying
performative statements.
prefixes,
or
substantiating
quasi-comments
or
some
claim),
and
metacommunicative
Linguistic markers include expressions such as "that
is," "namely," "for example," verbs like "mean," and various speech act verbs; explanans and explanandum are often connected by the use of punctuation: be noted
parentheses, a colon, and commas.
that sometimes
It should also
explanations of this kind are explicitly
requested by the interlocutor (as in interviews); similar questions can also be inserted in a text by its author, in order to emphasize the receiver's need for the following explanation. As for explanations of the definition kind, it is interesting to draw a distinction
between
the clarification
of the sense of a
linguistic expression (in a natural or in a technical language), and the exposition of the relevant features of its referent.
Contrast:
(3)
il partito bolscevico (la parola significa "maggioranza")
(4)
il partito bolscevico, il partito che con piü forza poneva il problema della rivoluzione (from history t e x t b o o k s ) . 3
Some appositions clarify in which respect the mention of a certain thing (event, notion,...) is relevant to further discourse: (5)
The
Nel 1914, (a) la Russia, (b) la nazione piu grande del mondo, (c) con una popolazione di 170 milioni di abitanti, (d) era un paese debole e arretrato. (from a history textbook). 4 information
about
the population
(c) explains why Russia is
described as the greatest nation in the world, which the apposition (b) explains in which respect it is relevant to consider Russia (a), if one is to understand the importance of what the text is going to say, that is, of value at
least
(d).
Examples and lists may have an explanatory
in three senses:
they
may
paraphrases of some general assertion, features
of various
expression substantiate 1977). (6)
referents
applies, a related
and
claim
they may
to which
they
may
detailed
illustrate the
a certain
also
(or other
offer more
motivate,
speech act)
linguistic justify
or
(cf. Aston,
For example, quotation (5) continues: II potere restava in mano alio Zar e a una ristretta cercia nobili e borghesi r i c c h i . 5
di
11 This
statement
explains
(which opens a whole
how
country
is
the
to
be
justifications relationship described When what
assertion
understood,
between
(a)-(b)
explanations meant
and
of
and
speech
(either
by
motivations
justifications,
or or
"with
typology derived most
acts
of
which
the
a
weak
same
and
time
are
not merely
devices and
goals"
are
or
etc.
(2)
which
The
can
the
speech
explanations
content
by
therefore
either
both),
tell act
or
but
are
reported
by
by
be
"on
as
what
performed,
or
of the
count
"why,"
was
quasi-causal
What
the one
teleological
action.
problems with motivations
Consider the following
some
(5a)-(5d).
or justifications
is t h a t they a r e o f t e n c o m b i n e d w i t h e x p l a n a t i o n s
action,
backward
gives
example
propositional
j u s t a s is t h e c a s e w i t h
the
in
statements)
from von Wright becomes useful once more.
often
explanations, One
was
(c)-(d)
acts
the
force-indieating
finds
at
similar
way.
i1locutionary grounds,"
Russia
of
f o r the p e r f o r m a n c e of the s p e e c h a c t
in a n a n a l o g o u s
was
that
sequence
those
speech
of
of
acts
speech
the
acts,
themselves.
example:
(7) "(a) r i t e n g o estremamente pericoloso, per tutti, cio che accade a Teheran. (b) L a r i v o l u z i o n e k h o m e i n i s t a , c h i a m i a m o l a c o s i e b a s a t a sul f a n a t i s m o r e l i g i o s o , n o n h a a l c u n f o n d a m e n t o p o l i t i c o e sociale. (c) Q u i n d i e i n c o n t r o l l a b i l e e p u o c a u s a r e incredibili g u a i " 6 ( P a n o r a m a , F e b r u a r y 17, 1 9 8 5 ; i n t e r v i e w to S . P e r e s ) . H e r e the c o u p l e the e v a l u a t i v e (c)
(b)-(c) c l e a r l y p l a y s the r o l e of a j u s t i f i c a t i o n speech
themselves?
explain
the
Do
or use
The most speech the
performed
the
characteristics
characteristics
motivate evaluation 3.
act
(c)?
common way
act
sequence
speech
act
stated
as
constituting
verb
"to
"to
is
an
an
illocutionary
is
tackled below in
effect
"spiegare").
in
Does
(b)
(b)
We
shall verb;
act,
and
not
in
such
here
depends a
case?
is
Italian,
discuss
this
(b)
speech
explanation
(or,
act to the
whether
on
question
and
causally
statement
present a
a n a c t of
explain"
illocutionary
("spiegare")
utterances of
(c)?
about
whether will
be
(4.).
"To explain" way
in
what
stated
to m e t a c o m m u n i c a t i v e l y
verb
explaining
(a); b u t
O r m a y b o t h t h i n g s b e s a i d to b e the
corresponding explain"
in
of
climatic
such
as
change."
"I
c o u l d p e r h a p s b e u s e d in a explain But
it
o r i n t r o d u c e a s e q u e n c e of u t t e r a n c e s
the
death
is m o r e
of
often
performative
dinosaurs used
to
as
an
announce
(by the s p e a k e r h i m / h e r s e l f
or
12 by a n o t h e r s p e a k e r ) , w h i c h h a s to c o u n t a s , o r w h i c h c o n t a i n s , s o m e s p e e c h a c t of e x p l a n a t i o n . The following example may be c o n s i d e r e d as
typical:
(8)
(a) p e r i b i o l o g i n o n e s i s t e d o s e di r a d i a z i o n i c h e p o s s a essere c o n s i d e r a t a innocua per una cellula. (b) " B a s t a c h e una s i n g o l a p a r t i c e l l a radioattiva alteri un singolo gene del DNA (c) p e r c h e ci s i a u n r i s c h i o " (d) s p i e g a B e r n a r d C o h e n , d e l l ' u n i v e r s i t ä di P i t t s b u r g . (e) " L e s e q u e n z e geniche dei cromosomi infatti possono venire amputate, s p o s t a t e , i n v e r t i t e , d u p l i c a t e (f) e n e i p u n t i di r o t t u r a possono insorgere m u t a z i o n i " ? ( P a n o r a m a , M a y 18, 1 9 8 6 ) .
The by
use the
of
the
name
speech act
and
the
verb
credentials
the e x p e c t e d e x p l a n a t i o n . ly e x p l a n a t o r y : reported sufficient
of
condition
of
(d)
"authority"
the
(a);
Consideration
of
accompanied
who
moreover,
biological
risk
exemplifies how particles can alter the genes the k i n d of b i o l o g i c a l
is h e r e
is
to
(b)
give
genuine-
( b ) - ( c ) - ( e ) - (f) j u s t i f i e s t h e
biologists
of
the
in
H i s r e p o r t e d s p e e c h is, h o w e v e r ,
the s e q u e n c e
opinion
"spiega"
formerly
expounds
mentioned
by
(b); a n d
(f)
(c),
(e)
specifies
risk.
further
examples
of
reported
speech
introduced
b y " s p i e g a " c o n f i r m s the i m p o r t a n c e of the r e l a t i o n s h i p b e t w e e n of
explanation
with
which
and
the
physicians,
the
speaker
and
role is
of
"expert"
endowed.
politicians
or
any as how
Curiously
clear an
enough,
businessmen
things
really
relationship act
example
addressor
speech show
and
act
the
official with
covering
cf
so
what
on.
and
sequence
but
has
(9)
authority
scientists,
official
In
these
addressee as
"interactional"
counts
really
an
that
roles
meaning
nevertheless
cases
it
or
is
characterizes of
be
exhibit
happened,
explanation.
p r e v a i l i n g o v e r the " c o n t e n t " m e a n i n g b a s e d o n t h e andum
acts
that an explanation will
structure,
example
are,
between
or
will
for
of
follows does not necessarily
explanans-explanandum
explanation,
speech
what
or
Interviews
are often introduced by the announcement given.
a
One
of the the
more
"explanation"
explanans-explan-
relationship. (a) l ' a t t e n z i o n e d e l l o s c i e n z i a t o m i l a n e s e si e c o n c e n t r a t a sulla d e r i v a dei continenti. (b) " Q u a n d o la P a n g e a , l ' u n i c o g r a n d e c o n t i n e n t e c h e r a c c o g l i e v a 200 m i l i o n i di a n n i fa t u t t e le t e r r e e m e r s e , si f r a n t u m o , " s p i e g a , "le 'isole' c h e iniziarono ad andare alia deriva erano costituite da terre relativamente piccole c i r c o n d a t e d a l l ' a c q u a e s o l c a t e de mari interni. Era proprio questa preponderanza del mare a r e n d e r e il c l i m a di q u e s t i c o n t i n e n t i - i s o l a p a r t i c o l a r m e n t e mite." (c) "Si c r e o , " a f f e r m a P i n n a , " l a t i p i c a p o p o l a z i o n e de ambiente s t a b i l e . " (d) " Q u a n d o i c o n t i n e n t i rallen-
13
t a r o n o , s i n o q u a s i a f e r m a r e , la l o r a d e r i v a , " d i c e P i n n a , "la t e n s i o n e d e l l a c r o s t a t e r r e s t r e c a l d . C o m p a r v e il c l i m a tipicamente c o n t i n e n t a l e : L'ambiente divenne instabile. O r a e r a n o f a v o r i t i q u e i " p r o g r a m m i di v i t a " che p r e v e d e v a n o poche specie con tanti individui in g r a d o di n u t r i r s i di molti cibi diversi. I dinosauri erano l'esatto contrario e p e r i r o n o " 8 ( L ' E s p r e s s o , M a y 18, 1 9 8 6 ) .
Here
the
"spiega"
first
(explains),
phenomenon merely the
gives
under
describes
contrary, of
intervention
his
"afferma"
Prof. Pinna,
the
speaker
discussion, the
namely,
environment
second
climatic an
but
by
change,
explanation ("states")
and
to
and
his
the
does why
not
introduced
yet
they
end
of
dinosaurs,
("says").
are
It w i l l
He
t h a n w h a t h e is s a i d to " e x p l a i n . "
objected
initial
"spiega"
is
intended
to
undeniable
widely
shared
actually
in
personal
(b)
the
scientific
explains,
continental
4.
that
drift
by
is),
knowledge
the
way,
while
in
(though scientific)
he
introduced
by
speaks
(on
what (c)
the
but also
(d)
It c o u l d
in
which
the
the r e c o g n i t i o n speaker
gives
however,
an
examples
quoted
above,
possible
for
to m a k e
the
us
communicative
addressor p a r t of
of
which
he the
advances
his
own
in o u r a n a l y s i s , a s s p e e c h a c t s
of the c o m m u n i c a t i v e
some
information
that
to
relationships;
situation
the
incomplete
as well some
as
the a d d r e s s e e . present
to
some There
that
description.
from other
other
texts
tentative the
kind
of
one with
authority
possess. But
from
examined,
suggestions.
the it
is
(i)
In
recognized
authority
of
the
need
informed
on
the
is no r o o m f o r
something
as
addressee
a u t h o r i t y or at least w i t h an
relationship,
corresponds
is n o f e e l i n g
of
what
far s u p e r i o r to a n y w h i c h the a d d r e s s e e m i g h t p o s s i b l y is,
a possessor
devices;
s o m e k i n d of u n c o n t r o v e r s i a l This
it
and
(ii) t h r o u g h the r e c o g n i t i o n of e x p l a n a n s - e x p l a n a n d u m through
the
recognized:
(i) by a n u m b e r of l i n g u i s t i c (iii)
be
However,
means
he
far
introduce
basis
"Pangea"
and
as
that
claims.
A c t s of e x p l a n a t i o n a p p e a r ,
can make themselves
scientist
the
causes
where
w h o l e d i s c o u r s e a n d t h u s d o e s n o t n e e d to b e r e p e a t e d . is
On
the
be n o t i c e d
more controversial, the
perished.
(d),
w h a t the s c i e n t i s t s a y s a n d s t a t e s is m o r e e x p l a n a t o r y , that
the
developed.
intervention
by
explain
(c), w h e r e h e e x p o u n d s third
"dice"
is
dinosaurs
in w h i c h
intervention
(b),
to
be
"explanation"
is u n k n o w n ,
unclear,
if
there
difficult
14
to understand, and so on, which the addressee cannot know, clarify, understand
by
him/herself.
Thus
the
journalist
puts
his/her
questions to an expert assuming that there is some ignorance, lack of clarity, misunderstanding, or curiosity among the public about those themes, and that expert's authority will eliminate or satisfy it.
Of course, such an assumption may sometimes be wrong, or at
least in part, but the additional implicit communication "you need to
know
or understand
receiver explicitly
all
this"
questions
is not
cancelled,
and rejects
it.
unless
the
The case of
the
scientist looking for an explanation of some phenomenon seems to be a counterexample to this analysis only in so far as one does
not
realize that the two roles of addressor and addressee are played by the
same actor,
framework
but
they
are
different
nonetheless.
In
this
it can be understood why texts produced within contexts
where the need of knowing,
understanding,
and
so on is
already
institutionally presupposed, easily lend themselves to be considered as texts that explain something. (ii) Is explaining
an i 1 locutionary
act?
Well, apart
from its
fortunes in speech act theory/9 it seems to me that it produces a conventional particular,
change
in the modal
interaction.^0 be described roughly
in the context
of
the utterance,
and,
in
competencies of the participants in the
As I have argued in Sbisä (1984), such changes can with
reference
corresponding
to four main
to the Austinian
illocutionary
classes of
exercitives, commissives, and behabitives.
types,
verdictives,
I should
like to say
that explaining shares some of the features of verdictives (in that it gives
the addressee
features of
a piece
exercitives
of knowledge)
(in that
and
it presupposes
some the
of
the
speaker's
authority, and places onto the receiver an obligation--although
a
weak one--to use the explanation in order to satisfy his/her real or supposed cognitive needs. either
one of
Of course, in actual acts of explanation
the characteristics
of
this
rough model
can
be
emphasized.
For example, a scientific explanation of some natural
phenomenon
is, for scientists, something to be tested, discussed,
challenged; there satisfied
with
is no obligation, not even a weak one, to be
it.
In this sense, explanation looks more like a
verdictive than like an exercitive. the
mass
media,
the
teacher's
But the expert's explanation in explanations
at
school,
the
explanations of one's own actions or speech acts given in order to
15 avoid misunderstanding,
all
have
hypothesis
verdictive),
while s c i e n t i f i c d i v u l g a t i o n appears as explanation,
indication
s e n s e of (iii)
that
exercitive
sense
Here,
I
have
leaving
explanations
can
interaction.
Thus,
actions,
limited
aside be
my
claim
is
other
found,
analysis fields
like
or
perhaps
scientific
statement
the
most
attitudes,
repair
the
misunderstanding.
field.
However,
in m o r e
detail.
language
or
by w h i c h
behavior
seem
discourse
and
(a is
common
fictional
On
possible
it w o u l d
to
basis
of
extend
certainly
explanations
our
account
to p r e v e n t ,
examples
not
for
avoid
or
referred
to
conclusions
be w o r t h w h i l e
where
face-to-face
individuals
in o r d e r
reported
activity
I have not taken into account those
intentions,
it w o u l d
to
of
real
their own and other people's here,
a
a
an
"explanation."
discourse,
of
the
as
where
intensity
explanatory
reported
(9),
of
character.
is
example
degrees
exercitive
an
Our
to v a r i o u s
to
this
to i n v e s t i g a t e
it
NOTES 1.
(a) if w e c o n t i n u e t o l o s e m u c h m o n e y , a n d a l o t o f i t , i n o i l - r e f i n e r i e s , o v e r a l o n g p e r i o d , (b) it w i l l b e m o r e a n d m o r e d i f f i c u l t to f i n d t h e f i n a n c i a l r e s o u r c e s to m a k e t h e n e c e s s a r y i n v e s t m e n t s in the s e a r c h for o i l . (c) T h i s is f o r m e a s o u r c e of g r e a t w o r r y , (d) b e c a u s e w e s h a l l n e e d q u a n t i t i e s o f o i l s i m i l a r to w h a t w e c o n s u m e n o w u n t i l the e n d of the c e n t u r y . (e) A n d e v e r y y e a r the p r i c e of f i n d i n g a b a r r e l o f o i l i n c r e a s e s drastically."
2.
(a) T h e w a r (b) r e v e a l e d a l l the w e a k n e s s of t h e n a t i o n : w e a p o n s , c l o t h e s , s h o e s , c a r r i a g e s a n d w a g o n s for the t r o o p s l a c k i n g ; f o o d s u p p l i e s w e r e i n s u f f i c i e n t , (d) a n d p e o p l e from hunger and privations.
3. t h e B o l s h e v i k p a r t y (the w o r d m e a n s " m a j o r i t y " ) the B o l s h e v i k party, the party which put w i t h the p r o b l e m of r e v o l u t i o n (...) 4. I n 1 9 1 4 , (a) R u s s i a , w i t h a p o p u l a t i o n of country.
greater
(c) were died
strength
(b) the g r e a t e s t n a t i o n in the w o r l d , (c) 170 m i l l i o n , (d) w a s a w e a k a n d b a c k w a r d
5. P o w e r w a s s t i l l i n t h e h a n d s o f the C z a r a n d of n u m b e r of n o b l e m e n a n d r i c h m i d d l e - c l a s s p e r s o n s .
a
restricted
16
6. (a) I m a i n t a i n t h a t w h a t is h a p p e n i n g in T e h e r a n is extremely d a n g e r o u s , for e v e r y b o d y . (b) The Khomeini r e v o l u t i o n , as we m a y c a l l it, is b a s e d o n r e l i g i o u s f a n a t i c i s m , and lacks any political and social foundation. (c) T h e r e f o r e , it i s n o t controllable, and it can cause an incredible a m o u n t of trouble." 7. (a) according to b i o l o g i s t s , there exists no a m o u n t of r a d i a t i o n that can be c o n s i d e r e d as h a r m l e s s for a cell. (b) "It is enough that one single radioactive particle a l t e r s one single DNA gene (c) for there to be s o m e r i s k " (d) e x p l a i n s B e r n a r d Cohen, of the University of Pittsburg. (e) The genie sequences of the c h r o m o s o m e s m a y b e a m p u t a t e d , d i s p l a c e d , i n v e r t e d , o r d u p l i c a t e d (f) and at the points w h e r e a rupture has occurred, m u t a t i o n s may arise." 8. (a) the M i l a n e s e scientist focuses a t t e n t i o n on the c o n t i n e n t a l drift. (b) "When the P a n g e a , t h e s o l e g r e a t c o n t i n e n t w h i c h a s s e m b l e d 200 m i l l i o n y e a r s ago all e m e r s e d lands, broke into fragments," he explains "the 'islands' that b e g a n to drift were formed by relatively small lands surrounded by water and crossed by inland seas. It was just this p r e p o n d e r a n c e of the sea that m a d e the c l i m a t e of these i s l a n d s - c o n t i n e n t s especially m i l d " , (c) "A k i n d of p o p u l a t i o n t y p i c a l o f s t a b l e environments d e v e l o p e d " states Pinna ". (d) "When the c o n t i n e n t s slowed d o w n their drift, and nearly stopped," says Pinna, "the tension of the c r u s t of t h e e a r t h d e c r e a s e d . The typical c o n t i n e n t a l climate appeared. The e n v i r o n m e n t b e c a m e u n s t a b l e . N o w t h o s e 'life p r o g r a m m e s ' w e r e favored, w h i c h involved few species w i t h many individuals able to feed on many d i f f e r e n t foods. D i n o s a u r s were exactly the o p p o s i t e and they perished." 9. E x p l a i n i n g is listed by A u s t i n as an e x p o s i t i v e illocutionary act (1975: 163), while Searle (1975) and B a c and H a r n i s h ( 1 9 7 9 ) d o n o t s e e m to t a k e it i n t o a c c o u n t . H o w e v e r , S e a r l e d o e s not e x p l i c i t l y d e f i n e it as a v e r b w h i c h d o e s n o t m a r k a n i l l o cutionary p o i n t of its own (1975: 28). 10. For my view of the illocutionary act and its conventional effect, cf. Sbisä (1986, in press). F o r my use of the n o t i o n of "modal competence," cf. G r e i m a s and Courtes (1979), S b i s ä (1984). REFERENCES A u s t i n , J. L. ( 1 9 7 5 ) . How to Do T h i n g s w i t h edition). London: O x f o r d University Press.
Words
(second
A s t o n , G. (1977). C o m p r e h e n d i n g value. A s p e c t s of the structure of argumentative discourse. Studi Italiani di L i n g u i s t i c a teorica e a p p l i c a t a , 6/3, 465-509. B a c h , K. a n d R . M . H a r n i s h ( 1 9 7 9 ) . Linguistic communication S p e e c h Acts. C a m b r i d g e , Mass. and London: MIT Press.
and
G r e i m a s , A. J. and J. C o u r t e s (1979). Semiotique: Dictionnaire reasonne de la theorie d u langage. Paris: Hachette.
17
S b i s ä , Μ. (1984). 8, 93-112.
On
illocutionary
types.
Journal
of
Pragmatics,
Sbisa, Μ. (1986). S p e e c h acts and context change. In Th. T. B a l l mer, ed., Process L i n g u i s t i c s . Tübingen: N i e m e y e r (in press). S e a r l e , J. R. (1975). A t a x o n o m y of i l l o c u t i o n a r y a c t s . In J. R. Searle, Expression and Meaning. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. von
W r i g h t , G. H. (1971). Explanation NY: Cornell University Press.
and U n d e r s t a n d i n g .
Ithaca,
2 Utterance and Commitment: A Speech Act Analysis Robert L. Benjamin
If, as Wittgenstein has maintained, the world is indeed everything that is the case, then the words you and I utter seriously must relate in some way to that world--describing it, trying to change it, or telling anyone who will listen how we feel about it.
There are of
course more refined taxonomies of motive than those suggested above. Speech act philosophers and linguists (Searle 1969, Lyons, 1977) have identified (as forces of utterance) assertions, questions, requests, promises, advice, warnings, greetings, congratulations, and perhaps others.
Despite the undeniable impact of speech act doctrine on
various theories of argument, theorists have still concentrated their major attention on the nature of argument; or, where the focus has been structural or linguistic, on the relation between utterances rather than on what one is doing when one makes such utterances. In this paper I identify and analyze three kinds of utterance common to argument:
(1) assertion, (2) prediction, and (3) value.
In each case I consider the probable force of the utterance, and the reader/listener Is asked to note the persistent theme of commitment (similar to the "sincerity condition" present in felicitous speech acts) which emerges in the analysis. But first, some distinctions are in order.
I view argumentation
as a process, one which produces individual arguments.
In this paper
I use the term "argument" to refer to a piece of discourse composed of a claim and at least one reason for accepting or believing it. Inasmuch as this is a speech act analysis, I should make clear that I
19 regard illocutionary force as a property of a single speech act and not (necessarily) of compounds or combinations thereof which may together comprise an argumentative episode.
In recent years several
writers (e.g., Kopperschmidt, 1980, van Eemeren & Grootendorst, 1984) have developed thorough speech act analyses based on a compound illocution of argumentative sequences.
While such analyses may be
ultimately profitable, I believe they come too soon.
We must first
learn more about the forces of individual utterances made in argument.^
As indicated above, I will devote this brief effort to that
task. Assertion.
Let us start by excluding definitions from the class
of assertives to be studied.
This would seem not to be necessary;
but so prevalent is the habit in informal arguments of mixing definition and claim, that a clear-cut separation is essential. The utterance of definition is performative: illocutionary act of defining. this term as follows:...".
It performs the
It says in effect "I hereby define
The fact that reported definitions (from
some authority) may be offered does not alter their performative status.
Less obvious, and perhaps more controversial, are some of
the felicity conditions which would seem to follow.
When S offers
definition D to H: (a) It is not obvious to both S and Η how S is expected to use the defined terra. (b) S intends to abide by D. (c) D is not capable of truth or falsity. (d) Η may refuse to accept D, but cannot prove D to be wrong. (e) In the absence of rejection of D by Η, Η is expected to produce and receive arguments in accordance with D. One might quarrel with almost any of these conditions.
What is
important is that the language-clarifying and language-using functions be kept distinct:
their illocutionary forces are diametrically
opposite, their only commonality lying in commitment—to fidelity to definitions, to belief of assertives. Definition aside, formal argumentation is mostly assertion.
Most
of our arguments are couched in claims about the world, with an Implied commitment to the truth of these claims.
Although assertives
20 were not a part of Austin's (1962) original notion of doing things with words, their status and felicity conditions as illocutionary acts are generally accepted.
Searle (1969) states, as an essential
condition for S's assertion of P, that it count as "...an undertaking to the effect that Ρ represents an actual state of affairs."
Toulmin
(1969) made a quantum leap from traditional logic when he allowed for qualification of assertlves and suggested appropriate language for such qualification.
Unfortunately assertivee sometimes hide qualifi-
cations, or even additional claims, within the cloak of simple assertive language.
And because, when this happens, a separate
illocution is taking place, careful speech act analysis is required. First, the unadorned assertive making an unadorned claim.
When I
argue "My opponent is mistaken," the felicity conditions for such acts are:
Preparatory (1) 1 have evidence...for the truth of the
proposition I've generated, (2) It is not obvious to me and my opponent that s/he already knows...; Sincerityt position; Essential;
I believe the pro-
Counts as an undertaking to the effect that the
proposition represents an actual state of affairs. So far the application of speech act doctrine has told us nothing we didn't already know.
But serious assertlves in the argumentative
process are seldom matters of absolute fact; and qualification changes the nature of assertlves In Important ways.
Apart from the
obvious clausal mechanisms with which Toulmin Illustrates his models, our language provides us with many devices for modifying our claims without always seeming to.
One such device is the sentence adverb.
In a paper delivered some years back I argued—impressing nobody, as I recall--that sentence adverbs (those which are said to modify entire sentences rather than components) are best understood by studying their illocutionary impact upon the parent statement (Benjamin, 1981).
I offered six categories of such forces, at least
two of which are important in argumentative assertion.
Since we are
concerned with commitment, we should look first at those adverbs which alter conviction level (van Eemeren, 1984, p. 107). When I utter the statement "My opponent is mistaken," I am committed to its truth.
Insert "probably" or "possibly" or "conceivably"
and the commitment has been lowered in varying degree.
In speech act
21 language, the felicity conditions no longer apply.
Insert "suppos-
edly" or "presumably" or "allegedly" and I am no longer on the hook for any commitment to veracity of the core proposition.
Paradoxi-
cally (slci), the Insertion of "surely" or "certainly" or "undoubte d l y " — w o r d s which ought etymologically to remove all doubt—actually announce to all the world that I'm not sure.
(This last phenomenon
is particularly noticeable in informal conversation:
"Surely you
locked the door before you left!" means "I'm beginning to doubt that you locked the door.") When my commitment to truth _ie complete, however, a different category of sentence adverb may intrude to suggest the inevltlbillty of believing as I do.
When I accuse my opponent of being "clearly"
(or "obviously" or "manifestly" or "patently") mistaken, I am not only laying my commitment on the line but also implying that anyone with brains ought to agree.
The appearance of the "ought" factor
introduces a value element which will be considered briefly later. Whether tempering conviction level or insisting on certainty, then, the sentence adverb--or any of a half-dozen similar devices-quietly exerts its influence on the core claim.
Their perlocution-
ary Impact in an argument is, I believe, yet to be measured. Prediction.
At first glance there seems to be no need to treat
prediction apart from assertion.
Assertives and predlctlvee both
make c l a i m s — t h e former, of the present or past; the latter of the future.
But one's commitment to a predictive must surely be weaker
than to most assertives, particularly in matters of fact.
(Factual
matters of the present and past are usually easy to commit to; while predictlves of tomorrow's rising of the sun and the stock market are not equally attractive.)
But to understand the lllocutionary force
of a predictive we must first separate it from that of a promise (Lyons, 1977, p. 728). When I say "I will be there at nine," I am probably making a promise.
(The "shall" and "will" distinction of traditional grammar
Is virtually extinct in American English.) to strike out," I am surely predicting.
When I say "He is going
But what about "Under our
plan, bills will be paid from the general fund"?
Am I proposing,
predicting, promising, or perhaps some combination of these acts?
22 Grammarians used to say "Statements of the future worded in the first person are (probably) promises; those occurring in the third person are predictions."
It takes only a few counter-examples to reject
this notion: (1) My son will be in class tomorrow (I assure you). (2) The President will be in Hawaii tomorrow. (3) I'm going to be sick! (4) Officers will wear ties at all times. (5) Bills will be paid from the general fund. Example (1) is a promise, despite its third-person wording.
We know
this because of the presence of an illocutionary verb ("assure"); but even without that parenthetical phrase, tone and context would surely indicate promisehood. control:
(1) differs from (2) largely in the matter of
the parent has control over the actions of the child, or
thinks β/he does.
In (2), the speaker is presumbably reporting plans
over which s/he has no control and thus is predicting behavior rather than promising it.
It is hard to dream up a circumstance where (3)
is a promise, despite the first-person utterance.
(4) is neither a
predictive nor a promise, but rather a directive--again, despite the syntax.
Before trying to characterize (5) we should agree on some
felicity conditions condensed from Searle (1969): Promises.
Vhen S promises Η to to A:
(a) S must believe Η wants A. (b) A must be controllable by S. (c) S must Intend (is committed) to do A. (d) It is agreed that S might not do A without the promise. Predlctlves.
When S predicts event F, to H:
(a) S must believe that Ε will (probably) occur. (b) There must be some level of doubt that Ε will occur. Given these conditions (and there may be others), it seems that example (5), though a statement about the future, partakes only in small part of prediction or of promise: tation.
it is an utterance of expec-
But one cannot say "I hereby expect...", so (5) seems not to
be performative at all.
Yet it cannot be assertive because, among
other reasons, S cannot be expected to commit to it.
(Embezzlement,
a bankrupt general fund, or other factors beyond S's control may pre-
23 elude the predicated payments.)
While it is true that (5) is part of
a complex proposal, its Illocutionary force is quite different from such proposals as "Let's go to the movies."
Apparently a new
category of illocution must be developed, a task best left to another paper. The above conditions for predictives and promises indicate different, if overlapping, illocutionary forces at work.
Yet It is our
practice in argumentation to blend these forces in a convenient promise-type assertion, seeking, I guess, to combine the authority of a predictive with the personal credibility of a promise.
This brings
us to the main class of predictives in formal argumentation:
those
which depict the future under (or without) a proposed change. One might expect, in formal situations at least, that each predictive would be accompanied by some illocutionary force marker or markers indicating the degree of commitment of the utterer and how 2 that degree of commitment came about. In practice this rarely happens.
To the contrary, we use the same battery of comforting
qualifiers to strengthen our own and our listeners' convictions that the predicted result will occur. And strangely, we use force 3 such as "promise" and "assure" without the slightest sign of
markers
remorse:
"If we adopt socialized medicine, I promise you, we'll have
every sore thumb In the country clogging the doctors' offices." While predictives in a formal policy argument may be less metaphorical, it is quite common to hear "promise" or "assure" in support of a predictive where the felicity condition of control Is clearly absent.
We are willing, that is, to ignore illocutionary require-
ments and lay our personal credibility on the line by "promising" or "assuring" results from untried polities--provided the argumentative stakes are high enough. In summary, statements about the future are a large part of most policy arguments.
In actual practice prediction, promise, expecta-
tion, and perhaps other acts, are often balanced and interchanged, even though each has its own separate set of felicity conditions. Perhaps this is because what we predict Is tightly clothed in what we expect, want, or fear and can't control. language of value.
This brings us to the
24 Value,
I use this term to refer to a position (expressed or Implied)
of approval or disapproval of something.
"Evaluation" Is the process
of expressing such approval or disapproval; an "evaluative" Is the lllocutlonary act that does it.
Authors of speech act theory say
little or nothing about evaluatlves as lllocutlonary acts; those who do apparently regard them as a special kind of expressive. Yet the act of approving (or disapproving) is surely a way of doing things with words, often in a single utterance, sometimes in a concealed word or two.
Despite the immense difficulty of ferreting out the
evaluative component in argumentative discourse, some attempt must be made to establish at least an essential condition for evaluation. Ue should start by noting that evaluatlves in the pure form rarely enter an argument.
While It may serve political posturing to point
with pride and view with alarm, such utterances as "It is good that we speak together" are clearly the province of grade "B" movies, not of argumentative discourse.
Indeed, most of our evaluatlves are so
deeply woven into our assertives that It becomes almost impossible to separate them.
(And when one succeeds, one wonders why one bothered;
for the arguer's response is always "That's not what I said.")
Con-
sider the following: (6) My opponent is clearly mistaken. (7) Scuttling price supports will clearly ruin the farmers. Earlier we noted that the presence of "clearly" in (6), in addition to firming up S's commitment, also implies that there is something wrong with us if we don't agree:
we ought to agree.
Whether one
regards "ought" as a special kind of directive or a blend of assertive and expressive or whatever, it is at best awkward to exclude the evaluative component in (6). in (7):
Two different problems are introduced
"scuttling" is an evaluative metaphor; "ruin" is a stepchild
of "change," best exposed by an "Evaluative Difference" diagram (see below).
A purist would rewrite (7) as follows:
price supports will lower the farmers' income."
"Discontinuation of But of course that
is not what S said; and such rewrites help us little in understanding the lllocutlonary force of evaluation.
The essential condition of
such evaluatlves would seem to be the obvious "...counts as an
25 expression of approval or disapproval."
But an evaluative lllocution
cannot count as approval or disapproval unless Η recognizes S's Intent to evaluate.
And since S is probably unaware o£ his/her own
evaluation (so instinctively has s/he clothed it in the respectable objectivity of an assertive with its own essential condition), the entire notion of essential conditions for evaluatives may be in jeopardy. EVALUATIVE DIFFERENCE
GENUS:
CHANGE
Appropriate Term: "progress" "improvement"
DIFFERENCE: Favorable "advancemen t" 'elevation" "deterioration" DIFFERENCE: Unfavorable
're trogres s ion" "degeneration"
In this paper I make no attempt to improve upon current efforts to treat compound argumentative illocutions.
Instead, I focus on the
nature of a single argumentative utterance and the nature and degree of commitment discernable therein.
Hopefully such focus may help us
ultimately to understand--and perhaps to evaluate--the larger bodies we call argumentative discourse.
26 Footnotes 1.
Streek'β (1980) notion that "To analyze utterances as speech acts, It is impossible to study them in Isolation." misses an important distinction between essential condition and implicative meaning. This distinction is treated briefly later.
2.
One engineer, when asked how his company arrived at a 5% probability of a dam failure, replied: "Twenty of us looked at the data, and only one thought the dam wouldn't hold." One hopes he was not serious.
3.
Lyons (1977, p. 738) suggests that Urmson's (1952) notion of parenthetical verbs be enlarged to include such illocutlonary verbs as "promise."
References Austin, J. L., How to Do Things With Words, Oxford University Press, 1962. Benjamin, Robert L,, "The Sentence Adverb as an Illocutlonary Speech Act." Paper delivered at the Annual Convention, Western Speech Communication Association, San Jose, CA, February, 1981. van Eemeren, Frans Η. and Rob Grootendorst, Speech Acts In Argumentative Discussions, Foris Publications, Cinnaminson (U.S.A.), 1984. Kopperschmidt, J., Argumentation (Sprache und Vernunft), Kohlhammer, Stuttgart, 1980. Lyons, John, Semantics (Vol. 2), Cambridge University Press, 1977. Searle, John, Speech Acts: An Essay in the Philosophy of Language, Cambridge University Press, 1969. Streek, Jürgen, "Speech Acts in Interaction: A Critique of Searle," in Discourse Processes, Vol. 3:2, 1980, pp. 133-153. Toulmln, S. E., The Uses of Argument, Cambridge University Press, 1969. Urmson, J. 0., "Parenthetical Verbs," in Mind: 61, 480-96. 1952.
3
The Problem of Deixis in Argumentation Barbara Kryk
The present paper delves into the pragmatics
of
argumentation
and, in particular, the role of deixis in this type of discourse. This paper will show how a line of argumentation can be shaped by the deictic anchoring of discourse participants. On the one hand, the traditional deictic dimensions of person, place and time are taken
into account,
i.e. how the position of the speaker renders
these three as I/here/now, respectively, and what impact this has on the argumentation process. On the other hand, three more types of deixis are considered, i.e. Fillmorian categories of discourse and social deixis (1975) and Lakoff's (1974) emotional deixis. These, it is argued here, are even more relevant to analysis, since referring to discourse entities by means of indexicals, ascribing social roles to discourse participants and expressing
the speaker's
emotional
attitudes can either weaken or strengthen the argument. Since the analysis is conducted within a contrastive
framework,
contentions are supported by data from English and Polish. On the basis of several discourse
samples
it will be demonstrated
that
manipulating the deictic anchoring of particular discourse participants can exert considerable impact upon the possible
inferences
drawn from an ongoing argument which become, in turn, subject to a range of different interpretations. 1. Person, place and time deixis It has been generally accepted that any utterance situation
is
egocentric in the sense that the speaker's location constitutes the zero-point of reference for all other discourse participants their respective
spatio-temporal
and
locations. Thus, the three basic
28 variables
that
determine
the
speaker's
deictic
anchoring
are
g r a m m a t i c a l i z e d as I/here/now. Then, e a c h u t t e r a n c e of: 1.
I am here now.
a s c r i b e s d i f f e r e n t r e f e r e n t s to the p r o n o u n a n d the adverbs of place and
time. Consequently,
the
speaker
and
the
pronoun assignment and
the
to
addressee,
in a discourse
addressee
situation,
switch back
the d i s c o u r s e cf. Lyons
and
as t h e
forth,
participants,
roles
so d o e s
i.e. the
( 1 977 :638). S u c h
a
of the
speaker
case
is
here
labelled a SWITCH, e.g. 2.
X: I x can help youy if s h e z does too. Y: Iy will be m o s t grateful be sure about
2'.
if y o u x do.
B u t Iy
wouldn't
her2.
X: M o g ^ x ciy pomoc, jezeli o n a 2 to tei
zrobi.
Y: Bfd^y b a r d z o w d z i ^ c z n a , jeieli to z r o b i s z x . Ale co do n i e j z , nie Note
that
speakers, person^
the
subscripts
respectively,
remains
pewna.
byJfabyniy
x,
y_ s t a n d
while
for
z^ d e n o t i n g
the
first
and
the n o n - p a r t i c i p a n t
al.
to
verbal
inflection,
(1978:22ff).
pronoun
third
constant throughout. This holds true b o t h in E n g l i s h
and Polish, but the latter lacks overt pronouns in subject due
second
Despite
paradigm
is
cf.,
this
subject
for
seeming
to many
instance,
simplicity,
position
Fisiak, the
v a r i a t i o n s . These
et
personal
can all
be
c h a r a c t e r i z e d as social deixis and will be d i s c u s s e d below. The egocentric principle works analogously in place deixis.
Gran-
ted that the speaker's location is the point of r e f e r e n c e for his or her
audience,
Angeles)
and Y
the
following
discourse
(from San F r a n c i s c o ) ,
between
requires
X
(staying
in
the switch from
to there, w h i c h stand for either of the cities d e p e n d i n g
Los here
on who
is
speaking at the moment: 3.
X: I've heard that it's been raining a g a i n up therey. You should come over h e r e x ; it's so w a r m and sunny. Y: Yeah, that's the way things go. It's always
warmer
t h e r e x than it is herey. 3'.
X: SJfyszaZam, ze znowu tamy pada. P o w i n n a s
przyjechai;
t u x ; jest tak ciepito i sifonecznie. Y: Tak, tak juz jest. As expected,
Jest zawsze cieplej t a m x niz
the same holds true
for time d e i x i s ,
so the
tUy. switch
b e t w e e n now (standing for the present moment) and then (referring to
29 some
past
or
future
time)
and their Polish
does not require any e x e m p l i f i c a t i o n What remains the
two
to be d i s c u s s e d
demonstrative
strative
pronouns
adjectives)
this
mal/distal distinction. have
a markedly
elsewhere
and
1985;
f i r s t p a r t of
(which
sometimes
that
vs. distance becomes neutralized
It
they
It
the
has
in c o n t r a s t i v e
Ta kawa jest dobra, ale tamta na H a w a j a c h b y ^ a
sentence can employ
however,
that
even
ten/tamten
demonstrated of
proximity
contexts only,
4'.
noted,
proxi-
t e n is t h e n u n m a r k e d
T h i s c o f f e e is g o o d , b u t t h a t i n H a w a i i w a s be
express
been
4.
should
demon-
opposition
in P o l i s h ;
in
such
contexts
a
4''. Ta kawa jest dobra, ale ta na Hawaj ach by^a
lepsza.
be
dimensions
concluded
of p e r s o n ,
at
this
place
and
point
time
that
deixis,
the
e.g.:
lepsza.
'this',
can
t w o o c c u r r e n c e s of p r o x i m a l
and
better.
ten
It
are
as
their Polish equivalents
distribution.
tarnten r e f e r s to d i s t a l o b j e c t s
this paper
function
that. In E n g l i s h
1986)
teraz/wtedy
here.
in the
However,
different
(Kryk
counterparts
three
Polish
cf.:
"classical"
grammatically
realized
a s t h r e e s p e a k e r - o r i e n t e d p a r a d i g m s of p e r s o n a l p r o n o u n s , a d v e r b s place
and
within
time
all
discourse
and
three
situations,
tation. The
and emotional
discussed
social and emotional used
discourse,
example,
we
may is
say
afterwards, 6 is
to e.g.
reference the
(before
refer
either
substitute pattern
in the c a s e of
here,
in
argumenthe
i.e. discourse,
three social
deixis.
to to
some
of
lexical or
portion
demonstratives
an
explanation
is
of
the
this
and
given
of
gramma-
prior
and
that.
For
which
only
explanation. when
both
the
speaker
and
the
hearer
share
the
this
may
appropriate:
6. T h a t w a s m y e x p l a n a t i o n . Contrary
can
SWITCH
aware):
5. T h i s is my knowledge,
becomes more complex
u s e s to be
ongoing
But
the
d e i x i s h a s to d o w i t h t h e c h o i c e
elements
the s p e a k e r
(which
to
deixis.
2. D i s c o u r s e , Discourse
pronouns
conform
a n d t h u s m a i n t a i n the r e g u l a r f l o w of
situation
remaining deictic
tical
demonstrative categories),
of
Fillmore, prior
or
(Fillmore
Lakoff
1975:71)
(1974:346)
subsequent
discourse
claims by
one
that
individual,
30 whereas
that
following
may
refer
to
prior
discourse
only.
Consider
the
examples:
7. A n d t h i s / * t h a t
is the s o n g M a r y h a s t a u g h t m e :
...
but 8. I s a w J i m ' s n e w c a r y e s t e r d a y . T h i s / t h a t T o y o t a
is
terrific. Moreover,
t h a t is m o r e c o l l o q u i a l
9. J o h n h a s b e e n s t u d y i n g G B really cracks me As might only
the
ten/ta/to)
for. a y e a r n o w . * T h i s / t h a t
the d i s t i n c t i o n
demonstrative
can be employed,
is b l u r r e d
(with
weirdo
8'. W i d z i a / a m wczoraj
its
in P o l i s h
three
gender
since forms,
cf.:
7'. A t o / * t a m t o jest piosenka, ktorej jest
e.g.:
up.
be expected,
unmarked
than this,
nowy
nauczy/a mnie Marysia:
samochöd Jima.
Ta/*tamten
...
Toyota
kapitalna.
9'. Jan uczy
si^ GB od roku. T e n / * t a m t e n
§wir naprawd^
immediate
here
mnie
rozämiesza. What
is
discourse
of
strategies
process
of
comments
on the
using
When
interlocutor's
us
one
of
earlier
the
I don't
that
both
this
and
think your paper
that
are
not of
in the
by
is j u s t a
where
up, the
use
discourse
the
not
if
the
same
statement: in
enough
for
the
Amsterdam.
comment.
in d i s c o u r s e
Polish. This
statement, with
that but
is i m m a t e r i a l
in P o l i s h , w h e r e
only
employed.
Summing achieved
the
participants
possible
is s o p h i s t i c a t e d
A g a i n , the t h i s / t h a t d i s t i n c t i o n to c a n be
only
affect
recover.
International Conference on Argumentation This/that
discourse
possible
heresy.
person comments on his or her previous 11.
the
that would
statement,
X: T h e P o l i s h e c o n o m y w i l l n e v e r however,
are
cf:
Y : * T h i s / t h a t is Note,
to
the demonstratives
argumentation.
this can be used, 10.
concern
uses
encountered
this
strategy
can
participants,
and
the
demonstratives
a distal
proposition
both
of
deixis
than that
be
while
can
one be
is
observed
labelled
demonstrative with
proximal/distal
of
in E n g l i s h ,
DETACHMENT,
commenting
on
which expresses his
used. A
or
distinction
her
similar
own
since
one
the
other's
less
empathy
statements,
phenomenon
in s o c i a l d e i x i s , w h i c h is the n e x t p o i n t of
but
can
analysis.
be
31
According to Fillmore
(1975:76ff), social deixis reflects
some
aspects of the social situation in which the speech act occurs. This encompasses the devices for person marking, the methods of separating
speech
levels
(plain, polite, honorific speech), the use of
names, titles, kinship terms, etc., and the devices that provides
language
for a speaker to be able to establish and also maintain
deictic anchoring with the addressee. The wide
scope of
social
deixis makes such phenomena particularly relevant to our analysis. A distinction
is in order
here between the deictic
roles of
the
participants of an utterance situation, on the one hand, and the social roles of the participants, on the other. As shown above, the former are realized
grammatically
in the category of person. The
latter, however, are culture-specific functions institutionalized in a society, and their most obvious effect lies in the determination of forms of address
(Lyons 1977:575)2.
We will now concentrate on
this aspect of social deixis. Out of an array touched
upon
of possible
here. One
of
social roles only a few will be
the
most
intricate
cases
is
the
parent/child relationship. So-called "baby-talk" involves a constant use of role names and, consequently, triggers the occurrence of the third person form of the verb in inflectional languages like Polish, e.g.: 12.
X: Mom will give some milk to Sue now. Y: Yeah, Sue is thirsty. And Mom can give Sue a candy, too.
12'. X: Mama da teraz Zuzi mleka. Y: Tak, Zuzia chce pifi. I mama da Zuzi te£ cukierka. Note that the discourse participants of baby talk do not observe the SWITCH strategy but speak of themselves and address each other by means of the appropriate role (parent) and name (child). Even though they are in a way detached
from their deictic roles, the case can
hardly be called DETACHMENT since the emotional involvement of the discourse
participants
with
each
(1977:677) calls this empathetic plained
here,
parent/child
some
additional
relationship
other
is
fairly
high.
Lyons
deixis. Before anything is exdata
from
is linguistically
Polish,
where
realized
in
the three
different ways, will be offered. The use of the three depends on the degree
of
parent/child
intimacy
and
is
deeply
rooted
in
tradition. The most formal forms of address are very rare now, if not obsolete, and today there is a tendency to use much less formal
32 ways
of
addressing
the
parent
(by
means
of
tu
rather
than
vous
forms): 13.
a) C z y m a m a k u p i l i
coS na
obiad?
b) C z y m a m a k u p i l a c o 5 n a
obiad?
c) C z y k u p i l a ä coä n a 1 3 ' . a) H a s m o t h e r b o u g h t b) H a s m o t h e r b o u g h t c) H a v e y o u b o u g h t Thus
in
a),
d e g r e e of b)
which
for
dinner?
(3rd p e r s .
for
dinner?
the
third
is t h e h i g h e s t
is a l s o f r e q u e n t w i t h o t h e r
and respect only
be
marked
14.
by
the
sg.) a n y t h i n g person
a n d in c)
social
roles
(teachers, doctors, etc.).
social role, The
(3rd pers. pi.) a n y t h i n g
(2nd p e r s . sg.) a n y t h i n g
employs
formality
obiad?
explicit
use
plural
the
dinner?
verb
it is the involving
In E n g l i s h , of
for
name
lowest. both
of
forms
of
address
in
Polish
also
to
of
German
or
parallel
and Mr./Ms. correspond two
uses
MAINTAINING,
which
the
that
to v o u s ;
of
since
third
both
reasons. In
part
of
the
switch).
In
the
social
includes
the
distance
is p e r s o n a l l y with to
former,
(to
avoud
latter
case,
preserved
by
talk
can
and
use
the
cf. L y o n s
people
tu.
be
labelled
honorific
third
the
person
speaker
to
strategy
from
reference show
for
the
on
role
signals
the
respect. Thus,
we
in t h i s c a t e g o r y . W h e n t h e
viewpoint
t a l k e d a b o u t o r is of
this/here/now, 15 o r
16
the
addressee,
rather pointing
than
self-idenhe
their
out a
(from t h e i r o w n o r t h e
speaker or
she
distal
tooth
to
a
dentist's
respectively):
It's this
It's that one.
can
also
one.
include groups
e.g. doctors often ask 17.
stemming
forms)
albeit
an ANTI-SWITCH
confusion
(1977:677). Thus,
say either
16.
social
or
proximal
15.
certain
is
pan/pani
MAINTAINING.
the attitude
point of view,
We
it
i n v o l v e d w i t h the e n t i t y
counterparts, dentist
the
vous/tu
French. Thus,
pronouns
(baby
Empathetic deixis also belongs
tends
can
Fisiak.
ty a n d y o u c o r r e s p o n d to person
cases
the
parent
can call it H O N O R I F I C
tifying
distance
denotes
m a i n t a i n the distance between the discourse participants, different
Form
e.g.:
distinction, These
the
such distance
I'd like to talk to you, m o t h e r / D r . Jones/Prof.
array
form,
How are we
(Fillmore here when
the
plural
they
patients:
today?
1975:84) talk
forms to
used
their
by
the
members
of
dependents/clients,
33 1 7 ' . J a k si^ d z i ä
czujemy?
or a teacher may address a student during an 18.
We didn't study too hard, did
18'. N i e u c z y l i S m y Finally,
telephone
British
English
observes
the
distal
s i ^ za d u ä e , inquiry
proximal/distal
that,
whereas
we?
prawda?
conversations
the
about
present the
principle,
the addressee
exam:
a
curious
case.
interlocutor's
i.e. the
identity
speaker
r e p l i e s by m e a n s of
In
uses
the
the
proximal
demonstrative: 19.
X: Is t h a t
Barbara?
Y: Y e s , t h i s is 1 9 ' . X: C z y to
Barbara?
Y: T a k , t o / t u Note Y's
Barbara.
Barbara.
that in P o l i s h the proximal answer
nally,
the
form
tu
'here'
form
to is u s e d t h r o u g h o u t ,
is m o r e
frequent
than
to
and 1
'this .
in A m e r i c a n E n g l i s h Y c a n a n s w e r w i t h a t h i r d p e r s o n
in Fi-
pronoun,
cf. : Y ' : Y e s , t h i s is Such
cases
can
be
she.
labelled
EMPATHETIC
i d e n t i f i e s w i t h the i n t e r l o c u t o r ' s distal
perspective,
since
the
lack
of
i n t e r l o c u t o r ' s p o i n t of last
use of
predicted
switch
due
the
speaker
often using the
f o r m s to e x p r e s s e m p a t h y . E M P A T H E T I C A T T A C H M E N T
involving The
ATTACHMENT
to
is a
empathy
more
strategy with
the
view.
deixis
to be d i s c u s s e d
here
is e m o t i o n a l
deixis
( w h i c h s i g n a l s the a t t i t u d e of t h e s p e a k e r t o w a r d s a g i v e n e n t i t y means
of
pronouns
the
demonstrative
reflect
emotional
pronouns
closeness,
tions on their distribution.
Lakoff
this/that) . In but
there
are
This Henry Kissinger
is r e a l l y
21.
That Henry Kissinger
sure knows his way around
is v e r y
tarnten
'that'
any difference 22.
restricted can
express
is
meaning:
Ten/tamten
in
Indeed,
speaker's
facet jest naprawd^
2 2 ' . T h i s / t h a t g u y is r e a l l y
nuts.
both
Hollywood! demonstratives
in P o l i s h , w h e r e t h e
its distribution,
the
restric-
something.
The proximal/distal distinction normally expressed by tarnten
both
contexts:
20.
in s u c h c o n t e x t s .
some
use
(1974) g i v e s e x a m p l e s w h e r e
this and that are u s e d in a l m o s t identical
is n e u t r a l i z e d
this
by
both
emotional wariatem.
ten
distal
'this'
attitude
and
without
34
But, as Lakoff rightly observes, this use is felicitous only if both the speaker and the hearer share the knowledge of the facts commented on and there is something remarkable about these facts. Otherwise, an odd statement results: 23.
?Ta Polska ma du2e pok/ady w^gla.
23'. PThis Poland has big coal resources. Since in emotional deixis the proximity/distance neutralized
in both
languages, we can call
contrast
becomes
this case EMOTIONAL
NEUTRALIZATION. It can be concluded at this point that all the above-mentioned strategies exert considerable impact upon the argumentation cess. Thus, for the
sake of argumentation,
the
pro-
speaker-oriented
strategy of SWITCH can for various reasons be violated resulting in the following scale: 1 . DETACHMENT
is used
by speakers to distance themselves from
their interlocutor's statements; 2. Distance is still MAINTAINED in case of baby talk SWITCH)
and
the
use
of
honorific
forms
(ΑΝΤΙ
(HONORIFIC
MAINTAINING); 3. In case of the lack of predicted SWITCH, the speaker can identify with the interlocutor's perspective; this results
in
EMPATHETIC ATTACHMENT; 4. Finally,
distance
can
be completely
neutralized
if
emotional factors come into play (EMOTIONAL NEUTRALIZATION). The present analysis has by no means exhausted the possible roles of deixis
in argumentation. But
I hope
to have
shown
that
the
strategies used by discourse participants can strongly influence the argumentation process and that the matter deserves a longer and more detailed study.
NOTES 1. The third person represents the unmarked member of the triad and in some languages it even has the characteristics of a "nonperson", cf. Beneviste (1971); Lyons (1977). 2. According to Lyons (1977:575), these roles are typically reciprocal, and the speaker using such expressions accepts his role vis-a-vis the addressee. Both these characteristics of social role have a great impact upon their function in argumentation.
35
REFERENCES Beneviste, Gables,
Ε. (1971 ). P r o b l e m s in General Fla.: University of Miami Press.
Linguistics. Coral
Fillmore, Ch. (1975). Santa Cruz lectures on deixis 1971. Indiana University Linguistics Club. Fisiak, J., et al., eds. (1978). An Introductory English-Polish Contrastive Grammar. Warszawa: PWN. Kryk, B. (1985). The pragmatics of deixis in English and Polish. Papers and Studies in Contrastive Linguistics 2 0. Kryk, B. ( 1 986 ). How do indexicals fit into situations? On deixis in English and Polish. In D. Kastovsky and A. Szwedek, eds. Linguistics across Historical and Geographical Boundaries. In Honour of Jacek Fisiak on the Occasion of his Fiftieth Birthday . V o l . 2. D e s c r i p t i v e , c o n t r a s t i v e and Applied Linguistics.Amsterdam: Mouton. Lakoff, R. (1974). Remarks on This and That. CLS 10. Lyons, J. (1977). Semantics. Cambridge: CUP.
4
Argumentative Linguistic Analysis and Refutative Discourse Gisäle Losier
The
aim
of
this
presentation
the concepts
of
"rhetorics"
"linguistic
argumentative
is to define
and
and to
"argumentation"
analysis".
I use
in
the
differentiate contrast
term
with
"linguistic
argumentative a n a l y s i s " to refer to what has b e e n d e f i n e d
previously
as "integrated" rhetorics because I want to emphasize its links w i t h linguistics.
Apart
from
this
terminological
innovation,
I
would
like to introduce and define some of the terms I will be using. theoretical
framework
elaborated Anscombre.
by
is the theory of a r g u m e n t a t i o n as it has
Oswold
Ducrot
and
subsequently
those of G. Genette on polyphony,
original
and, c o n s e q u e n t l y ,
use
theory
"expose" the
"speaker" being"
person).
The
for
term
by
thus creating
terminology.
I will
then use
them
to as well
will
provide
as contrast
examples
w i t h examples of book
can e i t h e r
be
an For
I will
theory,
category
on
the
of
the
"statement,"
I will present briefly some remarks
about
Chaim
(in 0. D u c r o t ' s
the g r a m m a t i c a l
"enonciation"
from G i l l e s G a s t o n G r a n g e r
In his
an extensive
"locuteur"
represented
"speech event" or "speech a c t . " tion.
Jean-Claude
I will need to use but a few of these terms.
term
"linguistic first
been
The authors have d e v e l o p e d the ideas of J. L. A u s t i n
speech acts and this
by
My
the n o t i o n
Perelman's
of
logical
concepts
organiza-
in order
to
link
them w i t h 0. Ducrot' s t e r m i n o l o g y .
in E n g l i s h
and expose my
view o n
the
I
matter
refutation. Lanqages
et
epistemologie,
G. G . G r a n g e r
asserts
(1979:163) that is is necessary to d i f f e r e n t i a t e two m e a n i n g s of the n o t i o n of
logical
organization
in
language
d e p e n d i n g on w h e t h e r
is considered as "demonstrative" or as "inherent" content.
The
demonstrative
supra-grammatical logical
symbolism.
level As
of far
logical
regulation as
the
in the
organization and
will
description
of
linguistic
appears be a
it
at
revealed
the by
superimposed
37 logical such
organization
is
irrelevant.
defined
as
implies
a
Another in
in
we
the
on w h e t h e r
consider
rhetorics support
would
or
apply
to
meant
to
to
Chaim
univocal convince
describes
the
or
general
organization
is
content
system
of
the
and
therefore
reference.
to
views
The
features
that
on
a
of
to
Its
"rheto-
"demonstrative"
by
1983).
differentiate
the
(1977),
speaker
reasoning
any
Although
type
does
not
discourse
Ch. Perelman
lengthily
argumentation
is m o d e l e d o n
a
the
system
whereas argumentation uses an unspecified corpus relying on a
thesis
elements
is
Finally
not
there
conclusion,
fixed is
no
only
weight--can
and
an
support
their
book
J. C. A n s c o m b r e in
terms
of
or
and 0. Ducrot
possible utterance
argument
for
some examples 1.
"It
A2.
a
thesis.
of
between
the
arguments--of the
and
a
various
truth
of
a
define
dans
the
a
speaker A-j
that The
as
lanque,
concept
of
sequence.
makes
an
la
an
"argumentation" There
are
argumentation
fulfill
authors
study
many
to
cases.
of
he
the l i n g u i s t i c s t r u c t u r e of A-| m u s t appropriate
favor
when
second
it
in
two
a
make
argument
( 1 9 8 3 ),
constitute Let
us
an
consider
in E n g l i s h .
helps
little
safe as possible.
to
say
that
technology
should
be
made
M a c h i n e s c a n a l m o s t a l w a y s be m a d e
b u t a t s o m e s t a g e the p r i c e of e x t r a s a f e t y s p o i l s the of the
the
audience.
arguments
Therefore
argumentative
Secondly,
conditions
approval
some
L ' arqumeηtation
presents certain
that
the s t a t u s of
relative.
Firstly,
utterance A2.
the
implication
refute
conditions. an
meet
agreement
c o n c l u s i o n can only be In
In a r g u m e n t a t i o n
must
necessary
a
from
well-defined
t h a t c a n be i m p l i e d o r i m p l i c i t .
follows
to
of
demonstration his definition Demonstration
term
argumentation
used
study
rather
persuade.
the
(Anscombre, Ducrot,
strategies but
for
considering
rhetorics
thesis.
pattern.
as
logical
distinction
are
inferences
formal, mathematical, same
same
Perelman's
a
a
universal
we
describe
refute
of
organization
language.
rhetorics or an "integrated" If
linguistic
linguistic
or a
maintaining
depending
the
aspect
the
structure
is i m m a n e n t
propose
rics"
concerned,
"inherent"
basic
operation I
is
as
safer, point
machine." "Accidents will
happen"
T h e E c o n o m i s t , M a y 10, 1 9 8 6 , p. 14 The
occurence
of
such
terms
as
little,
almost
and
but
in
these
38 sentences first
influences
sentence,
made as
the
kind
"It helps
of
conclusions
little
to say
one
that
can
draw.
technology
safe as possible" induces the conslusion
The
should
be
that "It does not
help."
Although the first part of the second sentence "Machines can
almost
always
be
made
safer"
actually
informs
us
that
machines
cannot always be made safer, the presence of almost will lead us in the opposite direction, and its argumentative value will be that "it does
help."
The
argumentative
last
part,
introduced
orientation,
and
the
by but
whole
takes
the
sequence
opposite
conveys
the
message that it does not help to say that technology should be made as safe as possible. Let
us
author's
consider
idea
attitude of
about
the
a
second
the
example
which
comparative.
Indonesian
government
will
This
illustrate
excerpt
during
is
the
about
the
a visit of Mr. Reagan
in their country. 2.
"Not
all
Indonesians
are as appealing
President
April 29th.
Far-from-lovely security men detained, and then
two Australian
when
he
journalists
Mr. Reagan from the United
arrived
girls
who greeted
expelled,
Reagan
as the dancing
who
in Bali
had
on
accompanied
States."
"The Ten Per Cent Solution" The Economist, May 3, 1986, p. 47 The first sentence states the loveliness of some Indonesians as well as
the
"far-from-loveliness"
uttered
in a context
which
of
others.
relates
And
yet it can only
to the security
men, and
be
could
not possibly be followed with a sentence about the dancing girls. J. C. Anscombre and 0. Ducrot go on to study
types of
argumenta-
tive sequences that are conditioned by the linguistic structure and the
kind
of
linguistic
"integrated
analysis
rhetorics"
as
that
opposed
they to
an
perform
is
termed
"extralinguistic"
rhetorics. If we views,
we
are
to compare
will
Granger.
What
rhetorics
is a
see
Perelman's
that
it
parallels
is implemented set
of
use of rhetorics with Ducrot' s the
division
by a "demonstrative"
thoughts
conveyed
in
or
outlined
by
"discursive"
language.
Although
Perelman's conception of argumentation is less constrained than that of a formal demonstration, its sphere of application is reasoning as it occurs in discourse. words.
The arguments are not always expressed with
The type of conclusion
that
can be drawn
is
one
to
which
39 arguments--implicit
or
not--lead.
By
contrast,
c o n c l u s i o n of i n t e r e s t in a n " i n t e g r a t e d " words
(always
implicit
conclusion.
expression words.
explicit)
The
justifies
The
concern
lead.
rhetorics
Words
serve
conclusion,
and of
explains
an
a
the
as
drawn
arguments
from
tiate an
to
the
the
study
study
of
argumentative
of
refutation,
refutative
linguistic
it
discourse
analysis
the
is
from
is
will
the
word
a
recent
article
pourtant
and
J. C. A n s c o m b r e
tries
to
evaluate
quand meme, mais, etc. translations just
the
combined
even
but.
yet,
so,
The
etc.;
author
take different values depending indicates that whatever a) a
the
all
argues
comparing
pour autant,
nevertheless,
of
these
that
it
with
cependant,
all
possible the
connectors
the F r e n c h
o n the c o n t e x t w h e r e
f o l l o w s is
French
same,
can
be
pourtant
can
it o c c u r s .
It
either:
refutation,
b) a d e n i a l ,
or
c) a n e x p r e s s i o n of
surprise
of w h a t e v e r p r e c e d e s p o u r t a n t . I have translated 3.
and yet,
process
examples.
T h e F r e n c h p o u r t a n t h a s a n a r r a y of
in E n g l i s h :
same, with
studies
meaning
o t h e r p r a g m a t i c c o n n e c t o r s c l o s e in m e a n i n g ,
to
rhetorics.
(1983)
its
differen-
the
I w o u l d n o w l i k e to a p p l y w h a t I h a v e s a i d to s p e c i f i c In
as
these
subjected
of
an
with
language to
be
study
of r e f u t a t i o n w h i c h is w i t h i n the c o m p e t e n c e of
of
linguistic
In a p p l y i n g
necessary
which
for
follow-up
rhetorics
a c t u a l i z e d b y u t t e r a n c e s p r o d u c e d by the s p e a k e r . concepts
type
is t h a t to w h i c h
particular
"integrated"
only
a) P e t e r
into
The author gives some examples
which
English.
is n o t t h o u g h t
to b e o b l i g i n g ,
yet he helped
me
once. b) H i r e h i m : h e ' s n o b r i g h t s p a r k , y e t I b e l i e v e h e very competent
in h i s
subject.
c) X: I h e a r d t h a t P a u l b r o k e h i s leg Y: Yet I met him today, doing his d) X: P a u l w o r k e d a
exam.
first two examples h a v e refutative value.
Y gives a denial
of
the
fact
referred
c a n e x p r e s s a r e a c t i o n of s u r p r i s e by
yesterday. jogging.
lot.
Y: Yet he failed his The
X,
but
it
can
also
be
is
to by
I n the t h i r d Y.
The
example,
fourth
f r o m Y a s to w h a t h a s b e e n
interpreted
as
a denial
or
a
example stated
refutation.
40 d e p e n d i n g on the context of utterance. It seems to me that such c h a r a c t e r i s t i c s also apply to yet and it is certainly occur
in
analyze
interesting
language
to
study
because
3. (a) and
of
the a r g u m e n t a t i v e
the
presence
(b), in a refutative
tion of an a r g u m e n t
movements
of
such w o r d s .
context,
there is an
followed by an a s s e r t i o n of
If
of
a denial
(3. (c) ) , the
direct opposition applies
some
another.
It
found, class For
to β.·
tests
utterance
of
asser-
c[ after
£ stands
synonyms the
distinguishes
to
differentiate purpose
to
of yet
is much
author
states
the
pourtant
denial,
is that one
combine
it
with
the
study
three
these
pourtant
criteria
could
but.
of
less c o n s t r a i n e d that
refutation
substitute
The
among
response
be
substituted
quite d i f f e r e n t
for yet and
(although
than
these from
cependant
from
for
one
I have the
French. what
pourtant
for the from
latter my
that but
of and
English
Any synonym of
the d i s t r i b u t i o n
they a c k n o w l e d g e d
in
features,
the
I obtained
informants d o e s not m a t c h this one for F r e n c h . can
in
A p a r t from these features, J. C. A n s c o m b r e
is not my
example,
class
In the
in my i n v e s t i g a t i o n w i t h n a t i v e speakers of E n g l i s h that of
we
an argument g_f
a l t h o u g h one w o u l d normally present £ as a n a r g u m e n t for case
that
the
for but
is
sounds odd
in
some contexts). I w o u l d now like to p r e s e n t a few examples of In this example, devolution.
What
the a u t h o r South
presents
Africa
should
an
refutation.
argument
aim
at
is
in
to
favor
establish
of a
balance b e t w e e n c e n t r a l i s m and regionalism. 4.
"The
United
show that lism)
India,
such a balance
is
Rigorous
States, a
safety
devolution
riots m i g h t
have
of trouble today.
even
the Soviet
(between c e n t r a l i s m
valve to the
saved
Nigeria,
the
for
the
rivalries
townships
after
and of
the
Union
regionadiversity.
1976
Soweto
South A f r i c a n g o v e r n m e n t a deal
Properly e s t a b l i s h e d it is still the best
way of fostering black l e a d e r s h i p and
institutions.
Yet this "bottom-up" c o n s t i t u t i o n a l reform is w o r t h l e s s - because
it
is
inacceptable
to even m o d e r a t e
blacks--if
it
does not go w i t h change at the top." "Reinventing S o u t h A f r i c a " The E c o n o m i s t , May 10, 1986, p. 12. The
presence
information.
of
yet
in
this
excerpt
provides
me
with
useful
I can a l r e a d y state that yet introduces an argument of
41
n e g a t i v e content, r e p r e s e n t e d by a p r o p o s i t i o n w h a t e v e r precedes.
Let
^JL, in o p p o s i t i o n to
^ r be,
~ r : A b o t t o m - u p c o n s t i t u t i o n a l reform is w o r t h l e s s . i-s supported by an argument w h o s e
The p r o p o s i t i o n content
propositional
will be,
c[: A b o t t o m - u p
constitutional
reform
goes w i t h changes at
the
top. In this example, the p r o p o s i t i o n r is supported by w h a t e v e r yet.
precedes
I w o u l d represent the a r g u m e n t s in favor of a b o t t o m - u p
reform
by the p r o p o s i t i o n JD, JD: a d e v o l u t i o n is a safety valve for r i v a l r i e s of d i v e r s i t y . What is the object of the r e f u t a t i o n is the underlying p r o p o s i t i o n r c o n t a i n e d in the sentence following yet. In the talks
following
about
example,
changes
the p a t t e r n
occuring
is
in S o u t h A f r i c a
f r a g m e n t a t i o n of the w h i t e d o m i n a t e d political "Whether
such
changes
can
be
translated
similar.
The
author
that are causing
the
economy. into
constitutional
reform is now the central issue.
White S o u t h A f r i c a n politics is
awash
franchises,
with
proposals
partial devolutions. the
n o r t h of new
gathers
Yet
power
know
pace,
history
cannot
be
that
as new
interests
the
constitutionalism reform.
W h i t e s , and blacks,
political
exchequer.
fancy
their borders
long as change and
for
of
who
flex
control
South
rejected
votes
and
look at events
such c o n c e p t s leaders
gain
of
Africa
rarely
their the
to
last
muscles national
suggests
that
out of hand as a tool
of
It ensured the r e v o l u t i o n that brought the A f r i k a n e r s to
in succession to the British.
however
blocking
temporarily,
in
calming
Now it has a role to white
fears
of
play, black
enfranchisement." "Reinventing South A f r i c a " The Economist, May 10, 1986, p. 12. In the sentence following yet, "the history of S o u t h A f r i c a that c o n s t i t u t i o n a l i s m
suggests
cannot be r e j e c t e d out of hand as a tool of
reform," we can isolate a p r o p o s i t i o n r w h i c h will be the object of an objection, r: c o n s t i t u t i o n a l reform can be r e j e c t e d as a tool of reform. The
proposition
r
is
supported
by the
sentences
w h i c h I have translated into a p r o p o s i t i o n JD, ]D: changes rarely last long,
that
precede
yet
42 w h e r e a s ~r is supported by c[ which
follows,
g_: constitutional reform w o r k e d for the A f r i k a n e r s . In
conclusion,
refutative
I will
movements
say
which
result in a refutation.
that are
in a r e f u t a t i v e
not
sufficient
discourse
in
occur
themselves
N o t w i t h s t a n d i n g the irreductability
of
to the
two fields, a r g u m e n t a t i v e linguistic a n a l y s i s appears to be a useful guide
in
reconstituting
the
indicates at a more superficial
underlying
refutation
because
level d i r e c t i o n s w h i c h are
tely derivable from the linguistic
it
immedia-
expression.
REFERENCES A n s c o m b r e , J . C. ( 1 9 8 3 ) . P o u r a u t a n t , p o u r t a n t (et comment): petites causes, grands effets. In Cahiers de linguistique francaise. Geneve. A n s c o m b r e , J . C. & 0 . D u c r o t ( 1 9 8 3 ) . langue. Bruxelles: P. Madrago. Granger, G. G. (1979). Klincksieck.
L'argumentation
L a n g a g e s et epistemologie.
Paris:
Losier, G. (In press). Conventions de refutation. In Proceedings of the 1984 congress of the International A s s o c i a t i o n for S e m i o t i c Studies (Palermo). Indiana University Press. Perelman, Ch. (1977). L ' e m p i r e rhetorique. argumentation. Paris: J. Vrin.
Rhetorique
et
dans
ä
la
5 Sequences with Concessive, Adversative, and Restrictive Sentences and Clauses and The Simulation of Dialogical Argumentation Patterns in Monological Discourse Antoinette Primatarova-Miltscheva
This
paper
restrictive
aims
at
describing
sentences
argumentative
and
patterns.
concessive,
clauses
On t h i s
as
adversative
functional
background
three
and
parts
questions
of will
have t o be answered: -Are concessive, of
a d v e r s a t i v e and r e s t r i c t i v e
argumentative f u n c t i o n a l -If
-and i n which manner, unambiguously o r the
questions
present
rather
than
questions faults
survey
they
are
put,
argumentation
norrnatively.
put
and
as
This arose
inconsequences
in
p r o v e t o be of
not? already
be approached
due t o out
roles?
make i t
will
is
originally
from and i n t o German.
indicative
roles?
s o , o f which a r g u m e n t a t i v e f u n c t i o n a l
These
relations
of
clear
necessity
translations
of
in
descriptively
the circumstance the
that that
to
argumentative
The answers t o t h e s e q u e s t i o n s
may,
r e l e v a n c e f o r the normative approach t o
the
explain texts
however,
argumentation
as w e l l . The
concessive
argumentative 1980;
Konig
convincing
discourse
description
of
discourse.
considered
several
1984).
argumentative
use of
by
is
& Eisenberg,
argumentative the
relation
None of
how
Klein
background
of
authors
to
be
(Werlich,
the
to
provide
concessive
t o be i n d i c a t i v e
question
is,
argumentative Grootendorst
however,
of
the
whether
functional roles. and
Kruiger's
functional rebuttals
Besides
works
in
an e x p l a n a t i o n
of
relation Thus
on
by
making
concessivity
"rebuttal." be
references
critique
Klein, a
role can
of
however,
really
T o u l m i n ' s extended model of a r g u m e n t a t i o n .
turns out
1976;
them d e l i v e r s ,
concessivity
tries
indicative
The
considered t o van
Toulmin's
as
Eemeren, model
44 ( 1 984:
1 99-208)
Toulmin's
model
d e s c r i p t i o n of The
I
fault
applicable
with
like
for
make
to
some
its
further
objections
applicability
for
model
description
is,
of
in
my o p i n i o n ,
explanations
justifications.
The
that
rather
demarcation
than
obvious
demarcation
assertion
and
1985: 6 9 ) .
no c l e a r c u t
(as
pointed
as
not a t out
statements,
and
explanations
take
statement"
from
explanations,
finding
is
We have n e v e r t h e l e s s
assertions
all,
there
not
to
argumentative
out whether
whether
something
realize,
than
the
however,
an a s s e r t i o n
an a r g u m e n t a t i v e
estimate
Toulmin's
argumentative
that
s remark:
no
without
problem
(1985:
and
112).
The
a
if
as
or
It
is,
take
into
there
is
somebody
granted
that
(referred "Harry
the
circumstance
t o as a r e b u t t a l )
was
born
circumstances
in
happen t o a p p l y
consequences.
First,
the
at
If
we
British
t o occur
"Harry's (referred
to a certain of
as an
there
is
argumentation" not
for
know
the
seems
parents to
a
same
of
whether
t o guess i t ,
Toulmin
or
rather
evaluation
necessary
influence
but
consideration
does
i s more important
Bermuda"
a
nucleus
no
a problem-situation example,
is
in f a c t ,
unlikely
problem
In h i s
false,
after
We would come t o the
be e q u a l i z e d
an a r g u m e n t a t i o n .
aims,
probable
s u b j e c t o r not and thus t r i e s
of
appropriate
c l a i m may be t r u e
Harry i s a B r i t i s h with
from
unacceptable.
a negative
when
or
"Harry
"Without
situation
differentiate
the
true
this
an
we
to
with
claim
pattern.
claim
pattern
Tirkkonen-Condit1
justifications
and thus not v e r y
the nucleus of of
as
acceptabe
with
the
Tirkkonen-Condit,
try
is
the
between
to
something
is
"for
line
Argumentation
f a l s e but not a c c e p t a b l e o r u n a c c e p t a b l e . statement
by
statements
is
famous example
s u b j e c t . " we w i l l
well
patterns.
finding
Toulmin's
always as
treat
out
it
between
not be c l e a r c u t ,
that
the
for
line
j u s t i f i c a t i o n and e x p l a n a t i o n might r e a l l y reason
to
patterns.
Toulmin's
the
of
to
respect
argumentative with
description
would
cannot
initiating
to
take
for
are
foreigners"
than the
circumstance
as
a datum)
if
both
situation.
T h i s has
the
circumstance
first
two
r e f e r r e d t o as a r e b u t t a l on the circumstance r e f e r r e d t o as a c l a i m must--precisely
as the
a datum on the
circumstance
warrant w i t h b a c k i n g .
i n f l u e n c e of
the c i r c u m s t a n c e
referred
T h i s would mean t h a t in p r i n c i p l e
d i f f e r e n c e between datum and r e b u t t a l . the
two
circumstances
referred
t o as a c l a i m - - b e
referred
to
Second, as
if
due t o
t o as some
t h e r e i s no
the importance
datum and r e b u t t a l
is
of
pre-
45 scribed
qua
arguing
would
human, a
law
there
be
will
be
no
pointless.
We
however,
of
no
intentionality.
place
for
claim
turn
out
to
r o l e s in a r g u m e n t a t i v e This
does
concessive only to
the
not
find
of
this
Klein.
same
fourth
however,
indicative
that
arguing
all is
he
preamble
relation. be
takes
practice in
be
the
describes
part
of
concessive describes
of
of
it
to
as
two
2).
this
purpose
tries
to
the
discourse.
We
explain that
datum.
We
discourse.
have
the
But
if
we
consider
go
but
at
I w a n t to r e m i n d h e r e of
the
important
in
the
study
"Argumentation
also
of
a
should
of can
'dialogue' be
dialogical
and
interpreted aspect
to
Klein
anticipate
to w e i g h u p p r o s a n d c o n s not explicitly triple
rejected
the
to
concessive
model,
possibility
potentially
of
have
the
has
this
Klein does
already
descriptions
for
argumentation
it
a
terms
of T o u l m i n ' s
cases
reader and a
to
but
as
regard
one
these
functional
roles
monological
refer
but
it a s c o n s i s t i n g of t h r e e p a r t s - - T o u l m i n ' s
inappropriate
functional
we will
Grootendorst:
Under
relation
false
functional
especially and
these
discourse.
is
consideration
as
imaginary
relation
descriptions
argumentative
'monologue*
concessive
an argumentative
is,
causally
background
into
a
(1982:
the
there
rebuttal
as
of
Klein
Eerneren of
first
the
objections
van
but
is
that
For
sure,
regarded
by
example
a
To summarize, datum,
appropriate
inappropriate
dialogically"
and
and thus
decision—everything
laws.
unsuitable
more
To
time
argumentation even
forget
Toulmin's
a l w a y s to b e i n t e r p r e t e d d i a l o g i c a l l y .
in
solved
discourse.
as
to
relation on the
be
signify,
relation
description back
not
In
intentional
predetermined qua institutional
have
must
to b e
s o c i a l a c t i v i t y a n d i n s o f a r n o t a p h e n o m e n o n of c a u s a l i t y
phenomenon
and
problem
in
to
the
fact
he
rebuttal, three in
in
claim
terms
as
argumentative
argumentation
as
a
d i a l o g u e w i t h a n i m a g i n a r y r e a d e r a n d a s a p r o c e s s of w e i g h i n g u p of arguments
for
potentially
triple
of t h e
or
functional
against
a
concessive
certain relation
argumentandum, could
be
described
then in
the terms
roles
-irrelevant contraargument
l i k e l y to be p r o v i d e d by the
imaginary
reader - a r g u m e n t a n d u m d e f e n d e d b y the -relevant proargument and
the
concessive
irrelevant
writer
to b e p r o v i d e d by the
connectives
contraargument
as
indicative
as
directly
writer
of
the
functional
connected
with
role an
46 argumeηtandum. consideration "rebuttal"
This
allows
the observation done above have
arugments.
terminology
both
the
same
us
to
take
that Toulmin's
status,
namely
into
"datum"
the
and
status
L a t e r o n w e w i l l h a v e to t a k e u p t h e f u r t h e r
of
observation
that there must be w a r r a n t s and b a c k i n g s both for T o u l m i n ' s data rebuttals.
To summarize,
the concessive
relation
c o n d e n s e d f o r m of A r n e N a e s s ' s p r o - a u t - c o n t r a Through element
the
in
distinction
our
description
l o t of g r a m m a r i a n s
way
to
the
expectation
show
the
the concessive and
to
show
relations A
has
that
it
has
of
causal of
much
the
the
background.
this
approach
more
but
the
is t h e i r m o d a l
of
(1981).
will
He
modal
triple
-on an argumentative restrictive
best
compare
that
one
these
two
and
restrictive has
no
in
the
group
reasons
their
been
originally for
common
of
this
feature
character.
t e r m s of r e l e v a n t a n d
are,
to
character
however,
presumption
pattern
relations.
and restrictive
provides,
intuitive
-as a potentially There
be
a
special
the
with
adversative
their
a
modal
and the restrictive
I h a v e a l r e a d y t r i e d to d e s c r i b e t h e c o n c e s s i v e -in modal
a
However,
H e s u m s u p the c o n n e c t i v e s
adversative
aber-connectives. up
have
Maybe
similaritites
concessive,
aspect
Fritsche
regarded as concessive, summing
a
relation w i t h the adversative
under
by
we
relation.
t h a n w i t h the d i f f e r e n t t y p e s of c a u s a l
relations
the
concessive
i.e. as a d e n i a l - o f - e x p e c t a t i o n
inconsequence
description
proposed
the
s t i l l r e g a r d the c o n c e s s i v e r e l a t i o n a s a
t y p e of the c a u s a l r e l a t i o n , in w h i c h
t u r n s o u t to b e
surveys.
relevant-irrelevant of
and
relation
irrelevant
relation
background.
o n the o t h e r h a n d ,
connectives
surveys on certain adversative
(I w i l l r e f e r h e r e o n l y to s u r v e y s o n
and
German
connectives) -and Weydt, -on
their 1979a, their
gelten/nicht -and e.g.
usage
the
on
in
argumentative
discourse
(Brausse,
1982;
1979b) modal
character
(Brausse,
1982)
in
the
terms
of
gelten the
triple
function
of
background the
of
German
some
of
connective
them.
Weydt
immerhin
as
describes follows:
" I m m e r h i n s e r v e s to l o c a t e the a s s e r t i o n of the s e n t e n c e w h i c h it is p a r t of b e t w e e n t w o o t h e r
ideas"
(1979a:
335).
47 Fritshe's
intuitive
presumption
and
the
partial
similarities
b e t w e e n the a p p r o a c h to t h e c o n c e s s i v e r e l a t i o n a s p r e s e n t e d paper
and
the
approach
in o t h e r
surverys,
possible
to
to
make
explain
the
it
both
adversative
worth the
and
restrictive
considering
concessive,
in
whether
relation
it
adversative
this
won't
and
be
restrive
relation -as modal relations -as potentially -as
triple
condensed
pro-aut-contra
in t h e t e r m s of r e l e v a n c e a n d
irrelevance
relations
argumentative
patterns
of
the
type
the an
in t h i s
paper,
distinction important
provided model
for
of
one
in
the
will
first
subjective our
of
purposes. about
description
Toulmin's
all
have
modality versus
discussion
the
of
we
for
the
irrelevance
datum
The the
rather
subject" an
example,
explicative
disinction
objective
the
than
modality
has
applicability
and
the
relevance
of
pattern
was
argumentative
one.
subjective
will
have
to
relations--one
examine on
the
o n e o n the b a c k g r o u n d distinguish
we
would
condensations
the
rebuttal to if
types
of
subjective modality.
be the
turns
out
explicative So
we
concessive and a
Thus we will
second have
i n d i c a t i v e of t h a t s o m e t h i n g o b j e c t i v e l y h a s indicative decide
(according
Kontext-abkürzu.ngen, decondensed
of
that
different
irrelevant. big
The
variety
to to
of
2) ρ h a s than
the
to
proved
then
concessive been
connectives proposal
we
point
would
to
have
connectives:
regarded
writer),
concessive
subjectively
has
been
irrelevant.
Fritshe's
interesting of
something
consider
1 981 : 54 ),
paraphrases
irrelevant,
person the
his
consideration.
of o b j e c t i v e m o d a l i t y
r e g a r d e d a s or is to be r e g a r d e d as
to b e
Since
irrelevant
-concessivity If
into
different
background of
it
been
between
-concessivity to be
two
take
is
Toulmin's
modality
we
to
of
But
patterns,
have
partly
regarded
for t h e d i s t i n c t i o n a r g u m e n t a t i v e v e r s u s will
whether
l a w s in the " H a r r y is a
to b e i m p o r t a n t then
up
objective modality
justifications.
versus
term used
decide
of
whole
an
to
answer
s e e m e d to b e p r e d e t e r m i n e d q u a i n s t i t u t i o n a l British
Naess's
surveys.
S i n c e m o d a l i t y h a s b e e n the m o s t g e n e r a l d e s c r i p t i v e to n o w
of
3) with
as
going
this
connectives
three
them
to
by
be
as
different
1) ρ h a s Χ
proved (X =
regard
distinction
might
context
treat
irrelevant
I am
as
is
ρ
a as
that
explained
by
48 regarding these
the
different
three different
however,
only
as
want
only
to
type
(I a m g o i n g
background
the
are
are
is
a
too."
indicative of
account
The of
about
this
type
of
s icher,
relations
concessivity.
may,
of
the
to b e
But
be
without
In cases
however,
implicit
of when
assert
so
one
and
natürlich
concessivity,
whereas
freilich
sicherlich,
is
obwohl
background
of
relevant
explicated.
what
about
adversativity
and
the
roles
relevant
contraargument,
argumentandum
relating
the
concessive
relation
of a n i r r e l e v a n t
background relation
of
can
an be
implicitly
explicit
described
as
the
to
a
in
I
am
the
going
relating
proargument
related
as
the
pay
paraphrases.)
proargument.
Their different
q h a s p r o v e d to b e m o r e r e l e v a n t
both
of
which
to
(In t h e the
paraphrases
but
relating
not of
a
connectives which are that his imaginary to
ignore
least, relevant
proargument
can to
be an
case
connectives relevant
could
be:
t h a n p, 2) X h a s r e g a r d e d q a s
restrictivity
are
objective
r e l e v a n t t h a n p, 3) I a m g o i n g to r e g a r d q a s m o r e r e l e v a n t Last
the
irrelevant
adversative
decondensed
on
an
attention The
direct
adversative
m i g h t b e r e g a r d e d t h u s a s i n d i c a t i v e of t h e f u n c t i o n a l r o l e
going
and
of
to a n a r g u m e n t a n d u m .
to
the
to a n a r g u m e n t a n d u m
proargument,
direct
relevant
or e x p l i c i t l y
only
contraargument or
a d v e r s a t i v i ty
modality
has been described
implicit
contraargument
direct
of
proargument?
Whereas
of
a
are
W h a t k i n d of r e l a t i o n s a r e t h e y o n the b a c k g r o u n d irrelevant
a
proargument:
restrictivity? functional
of
this
connectives
gewiss,
concessive
relation.
the
triple to
to..."
I
third
description
generalizations,
German
zwar,
of
the
T h i s is o n e
linguistic we
Here
obligatorily
I am going
triple modal
absolute
just
like
our
proarguments which have obligatorily far
research. of
of
remain,
the potentially
has
generalization on
some
of
must
concessvitiy
" T h o u g h ρ,
consequences
hardly
connectives
So
of
indicative
this
further
relation
say
as a potentially
one,
indicative
cases
concessive
generalization
relative
for
to r e g a r d ρ a s i r r e l e v a n t ) ,
argumentandum
"There
in
as
In this paper
outline
that
can hardly
normative
relative
connectives
the q t h a t w e h a v e r e g a r d e d as r e l e v a n t .
concessivity the
possible
the
We
explicating
paraphrases.
emphasize
of
explicated.
a
concessive
1) more
t h a n p.
described
as
the
argumentandum
i n d i c a t i v e of t h a t the w r i t e r
by
is b e s t a w a r e of
r e a d e r m a y p r o v i d e c o n t r a a r g u m e n t s b u t t h a t he them
with
respect
to
the
circumstances
or
is
with
49 r e s p e c t to h i s p u r p o s e s . relation
quite
functional occurs
as
sometimes
often
parts even
occur
are
consisting as
W h e r e a s the a d v e r s a t i v e a n d the in
sequences
explicated,
of
only
two
consisting
the
which
restrictive
parts
of
in
and
only
concessive all
their
relation
always
in d i a l o g i c a l
one
part,
discourse
i.e.
not
internal relation between two utterances but an an external between
something
At this point the
uttered
argumentation wise
not
(according on
the
but
that
speech
van
act
Eemeren
hand
that
claims
on
but
as
similarities
and
adversative and restrictive following
the
an
assertions plays
other
differences
expressed.
have
to
illocutionary 1982).
an
important that
(1979a:
it
of
regard act
Other-
as done by Weydt
hand
r e g a r d e d a s i n d i c a t i v e of a c e r a i n s p e e c h a c t The
we
an
relation
interpretation
Grootendorst,
immerhin the
explicitly
indicators
and
to i n c o n s i s t e n t
not
for a p r o p e r
argumentation a
to
one
argumentations,
as as
we should come
admits
something
it is to be n o t e d
aber-connectives
complex
and
as
who
role
in
connot
be
344).
between
concessive,
relations may be illustrated best by
the
schemes:
Restrictive
ur
relation
irrelevant
relevant argumentandum
contraargument shows
which
proargument functional
r e l a t e d to e a c h
other
roles
are
directly
and
explicitly
50 shows
which
the d i r e c t
functional
constitutes
the
r e l a t i o n r e g a r d l e s s of w h e t h e r
explicated or Though
role
this
in a d i f f e r e n t w a y ,
relevant proargument. the w e i g h i n g
all
these
three relations
are
justify
has
the
is r e l e v a n t . the
may,
using
argumentandum
but no justifications
these
therefore
two 1
and backing are
is
'that
terminology,
them.
terms
to
for
the
really
dialogical
dialogical
adversative Furhter
and
It is a n o t h e r
to d e s c r i b e
discourse
research will
unambiguously
this
different
become
dialogical
to
do
so--to
and
Be
'this
warrants
or
why to
to a n s w e r are
that
these as
it
irrelevant
in
starting
deserve
languages
functional
the
That's
necessary
The
question whether
process.
of
a
irrelevant'
relevant
relations
be, however,
distinguished argumentative -irrelevant
can
argumentations.
restrictive
is
asked
and
decision
he has to provide
to i d e n t i f y w h a t h a s b e e n c o n s i d e r e d
simulated
simulate
obligation--if
assertions
In T o u l m i n ' s
f o r b o t h of
relations
the
implicit
appropriate
be
indicative
They all provide, however, only the result
u p of a r g u m e n t s
which
situation
how
will
s o m e t h i n g h a s b e e n c o n s i d e r e d to b e r e l e v a n t or i r r e l e v a n t .
writer
a
role
of
not
of t h e f u n c t i o n a l r o l e s i r r e l e v a n t c o n t r a a r g u m e n t ,
why
background
point
for
concessive, be
studied.
the
question
indicative
of
the
roles
contraargument
-argumentandum -relevant by
means
of
proargument different
concessive,
adversative
and
restrictive
connectives.
REFERENCES B r a u s s e , U. ( 1 9 8 2 ) . Bedeutung und Funktion e i n i g e r Konjunktionen und Konj u n k t i o n a l a d v e r b i e n : a b e r , nur, immerhin, allerdings, d a f ü r , dagegen, jedoch. I n U n t e r s u c h u n g e n zu F u n k t i o n s w ö r t e r n . L i n g u i s t i s c h e S t u d i e n , R e i h e A , A r b e i t s b e r i c h t e 104. Berlin. E e m e r e n , F . H . v a n , & R . G r o o t e n d o r s t (1982). The speech acts a r g u i n g a n d c o n v i n c i n g in e x t e r n a l i z e d d i s c u s s i o n s . Journal Pragmatics, 25-38. E e m e r e n , F. H. v a n , R . G r o o t e n d o r s t & T. K r u i g e r of A r g u m e n t a t i o n . NY: Irvington.
(1984).
The
of of
Study
51
Fritshe, J. (1981). Zum Gegenstandsbereich einer Untersuchung deutsher Konnektive. In J. Fritsche, ed., Konnektivausdrucke. Konnektiveinheiten. Hamburg: Buske. Klein, J. (1980). Die Konzessiv-Relation als argumentationstheoretisches Problem. In ZGL, 8^, 1 54-169. Konig, Ε. & P. Eisenberg (1984). Zur Pragmatik von KonzessivMtzen. In G. Stickel, ed., Pragmatik in der Grammatik. Dusseldorf: Schwann. Naess, A. (1975). Kronberg/ Ts.
Kommunikation
und Argumentation.
Tirkkonen-Condit, S. ( 1 985 ). Argumentative Translation. University of Jyvaskyla. T o u l m i n , S. (1985). Kronberg/ Ts. Werlich, E. (1976). Quelle/Meyer.
Der
Gebrauch
Text Structure
von Argumenten.
A Text Grammar of English.
Scriptor, and
Scriptor,
Heidelberg:
Weydt, H. (1979a). "Immerhin." In K. Weydt, ed., Die Partikeln der deutschen Sprache. Berlin, New York: W. de Gruyter. W e y d t . H. ( 1 979b). Zur Unterscheidung semantisch-pragmatisch, dargestellt an den Partikeln jedenfalls, immerhin und schliesslich. In I. Rosengren, ed., Sprache und Pragmatik. CWR Gleerup.
6
Mood and Modality in Political Interviews
Daniel Carroll, Anne-Marie Simon-VandenBergen and Sonia Vandepitt
This paper aims to examine mood and modality in p o l i t i c a l interviews,
using
a descriptive framework based on Halliday (1985). Mood expresses the speech function, system
the
underlying
"giving
determines
or
organisation
demanding
the few b a s i c
command"
(1985:342).
information
speech
These
pattern
of
or
which
functions
the
exchange
goods-and-services,
functions of statement,
basic
is
are
which
question, offer and
characteristically
realised
in the Indicative ( i . e . Declarative and Interrogative) and Imperative moods. Modality choice
is
defined
between
in relation
positive
and
to polarity which signifies the
negative,
as
in ' i s / i s n ' t ' ,
'do/don't',
it refers to "the area of meaning that lies between yes and no" A
further
distinction
modulation.
to
Modalisation
probability
(prob)
or
be
relates
usuality
type, and expresses obligation Further which
important
refers
both
to
is
to
the
the
difference
Indicative
(usu).
paper
and
possible
relations
modalisation
clauses,
and
expresses
Modulation relates to the
Imperative
(obi) or inclination between
(incl).
subjective
is
values
and
are
orientation,
objective
modality,
(expressed as s : e x ,
to examine which of the are
between
expressed the
used
for
this
pilot
from
the
following
in
speakers'
s:im,
above-mentioned
political selections
interviews, from
these
political
inter-
intentions.
study
consists
recorded from BBC Radio Λ between Dec.
extracts
(1985:335).
and
different systems and their argumentative views^
etc.:
and value (High, Median or Low) of the modality.
orientations
The material
between
notions which figure in the a n a l y s i s
The purpose of this types,
are
that
of which can be either e x p l i c i t or implicit
o:im, and o : e x ) ,
and
drawn
straight
programmes:
of ten
1985 and March The
World
at
1986. They
One, 2 World Tonight, The World This Weekend, and The Week in Westminster.
The
53 2.
Description In
the
description
we
shall
first
discuss
each
type
separately,
and
then attempt to t e a s e out any g e n e r a l t e n d e n c i e s or p a t t e r n s . 2 . 1 . The four major types of modality (i)
Probability To
judge
probability
from
the
frequency
constitutes
a
very
of
occurrence
important
in
type,
the
material
and
it
examined,
occurs
in
all
four o r i e n t a t i o n s : s:ex (1)
This i s well understood by British made remarkable s t r i d e s , (d)
industry
and
I believe
it h a s
s:im (2)
the only major research on t h i s h a s been done by the NSPCC, and their l a t e s t f i g u r e s would s u g g e s t that . . . (c)
o:im (3)
i t ' s c e r t a i n l y not s o c i a l workers . . .
enough (c)
afterwards
to simply point the f i n g e r at
o:ex
was
(Λ) . . . that meeting i s l i k e l y to prove h e l p f u l ,
(h)
Three
this
important
noted
that
each other,
remarks
these
may
be
orientations
made
at
frequently
occur
point. in
Firstly,
combination
it with
e.g.
(5) y o u ' l l probably know that three members of the committee immediately issued a statement . . . (e) In this c a s e ,
the function of the modal combination i s to o b j e c t i f y what
i s in fact a subjective p r o b a b i l i t y . Numerous other examples of combinations were found, which we will deal with Secondly, metaphorical tentative
apart
from
expressions
classification
the
separately. 3 congruent ways of
are
used
of
extensively.
metaphor
in
we
include:
(d)
the view that ( f )
- referring to external
'objective/scientific'
evidence:
(8) we have very detailed s c i e n t i f i c evidence that . . . (9) the Inspectorate agree that
(e)
probability,
will
present a
argumentation,
statement:
(6) everybody abroad recognises this (7) aU take
Here,
political
i t s implications for the s p e a k e r ' s s t r a t e g i e s , which - generalising one's
expressing
(f)
and
54 -
dismissing opposing
arguments by using derogatory
(10) t h a t ' s typical Guardian claptrap (11) that is rubbish
using
nouns
and
(d)
(d)
(12) that really is a nonsense -
terms:
adjectives
(e)
in place
of the less
marked
auxiliaries
and
adverbs: (13) the potential for disaster i s , you know, (14) w e ' r e spending 20% more in real terms
quite a nonsense
(e)
(b)
(15) there's considerable uncertainty clearly in the educational world -
using
vague
expressions
in
order
to avoid
a
statement which
(i)
is f a l s i f i -
able: (16) it wouldn't surprise me if too heavy ( c ) (17)
(1985:334)
metaphorical
fact
people start to say w e ' r e
I'm not sure that helps their morale
Halliday of
[...]
that
out
representation
they
extensive
points
(i.e.
use
of
the
of
that
speakers)
metaphor
suggests
third
Halliday's
observation
list
of
relates
'probability'
be considered relevant,
viz.
of
is
are
the
its
role
this
important
in
aspects
"dissimulating
their
opinions".
'disguised'
the The
expression
interviewees.
to the use of adjuncts
'opinion'
most
expressing
that
of opinion is a typical tactic of political The
(c)
one
modality
being
modal
(1985:50),
and
adjuncts.
two
Apart from
further
types may
'presumptive' .
(18) manufacturing exports of course are at an all-time record level
(d)
(probability) (19)
in
my view,
the local
authority
should
have
a
statutory
duty
(a)
(opinion) (20)
(ii)
no doubt from the Labour MP's t h e r e ' l l be considerable anti-nuclear feeling Ce). (presumptive)
Usuality The
main
political great
remark
to
be
made
interviewees
is
the
fact
frequency,
e.g.
always,
about that
never,
the
the
expression
two
'high'
whereas
the
of
usuality
values
occur
only
'median'
by with
value
frequently used is often. As
with
modalisation
the is
use
of
metaphor,
to present
a
one
personal
of
the
opinion
main in
thus minimising the subjective element in the text. past with present in order to emphasise a point:
functions
terms of
of
usuality
a general
rule,
It also serves to contrast
55 (21)
if you have seven or e i g h t M . P . ' s t h e r e ' l l be d i f f e r e n c e s of view (e)
(22)
i t ' s f a r more before (d)
productive,
gathered
f a r more e f f i c i e n t
together
than
has
(23) t h i s i s the sort of argument that c o n s t a n t l y comes up If
...
of
presenting
comment' lack of (iii)
ever
or
irrelevant
point
to the
of
view
as
discussion.
It
'too obvious also
been
(a)
then c l a u s e s ( a s in example (21) above) have the a d d i t i o n a l an opposing
[...],
function
to be worthy of
expresses
the
speaker's
surprise.^
Obligation
As
pointed
out
above,
obligation
relates
to
commands,
and
once
a g a i n the four o r i e n t a t i o n s occur in the material although the o b j e c t i v e type was
found to be the most f r e q u e n t .
X to
happen'
instead
claims of the
of
Ί
The effect of t h i s —
want
X to
happen'
-
1
is
It i s n e c e s s a r y for to
'objectify'
the
speaker.
Examples of o b l i g a t i o n modality
include:
s:ex (24) I do want to see parents g i v e n a wider choice in e d u c a t i o n ,
(i)
s: im (25) Social workers must be held to account
(a)
o:im ( 2 6 ) t h e r e ' s a great deal to be done (c) o:ex (27) the need is to make British industry more e f f i c i e n t It
might be added that
given
that
the
speaking, and
the
speaker
there
is
tentative
a
(24) is
c o n t a i n s a very weak use of s : e x ,
a government
marked
suggestion
(d)
is
absence that
spokesman of
s:ex
interviewees
on
obligation avoid
especially
education.
Broadly
expressions,
this type
because
it is too committal. As
with
probability,
metaphorical
expressions
figure
largely.
For
example: (28) I t ' s a question of
t r y i n g to make sure that . . .
(29) What r e a l l y matters i s for us to have . . . Again,
the effect can
be
to d i s g u i s e
(b)
(d)
the s p e a k e r ' s own wish
('What 1
1
want ), as in: (30) t h e r e ' s no benefit in hardware for the sake of hardware
(d)
(31) what we want is manufacturing investment which i s a c t u a l l y to bring a worthw hile return. (d)
going
56 (iv)
Inclination The
that
paucity
of
examples
of i n c l i n a t i o n
interviewees a r e r e l u c t a n t to e x p r e s s
in
the m a t e r i a l
would
suggest
what they want to do, a n d t h i s
f i t s into the g e n e r a l p a t t e r n of being non-committal, a s h a s been d e s c r i b e d above.
In
almost
all
the
interviews
there
was
a
marked
tendency
for
the interviewee to s t a t e what ' n e e d s to be done' r a t h e r t h a n what he i n t e n d s to d o . One r a r e example of i n c l i n a t i o n
was:
(32) t h a t ' s what a l l the government measures a r e d e d i c a t e d to a c h i e v i n g (d) (v) Combinations A
very
frequent
type
of
utterance
is
one
in
which
a
probability
modalisation is combined with an o b l i g a t i o n , a s i n : (33) 1 think w e ' v e got to do a lot more work on the s a f e t y of n u c l e a r p o w e r . . . (f) This u t t e r a n c e combines p r o b / s : e x with o b l / o : i m ,
a n d is an example of
what might be termed h y p o t a c t i c combination. The
following
example
adds
metaphorical
expression
to
a
prob/obl
combination: (34)
Safety s t a n d a r d s put on by the I n s p e c t o r a t e a r e levels way below what in a n y normal theory would be n e e d e d , (e)
The
function
of
this
type
of
combination
seems
to
be to weaken
the
o b l i g a t i o n element in the m o d a l i s a t i o n . General conclusions The m a t e r i a l a n a l y s e d would seem to yield the following conclusions: 1. The most important t y p e s a r e p r o b a b i l i t y a n d o b l i g a t i o n . 2.
Metaphorical
expressions
occur v e r y
frequently,
and t h e i r
principal
function is to objectify the s p e a k e r ' s opinion or w i s h . 3. 'High' v a l u e s occur much more f r e q u e n t l y t h a n viz.
prob
-
certain,
usu
-
always,
obi
'medial»' or 'low'
- required,
incl
-
ones,
determined
(although more evidence is needed for i n c l i n a t i o n ) . 4. The implicit o r i e n t a t i o n most
frequent
emerges 5. to
as
Although
note
politicians
a
type
prob/o:im,
(from
is much more f r e q u e n t t h a n the e x p l i c i t . The the
either
admittedly alone
or
not a concrete conclusion
difference
in
the
on the one hand
use
and
of
public
in
small
number
combination
as s u c h ,
it might be
combinations servants
of
with
on
between the other
examples) obligation. interesting professional discussing
p o l i c y . All the p o l i t i c i a n s made extensive use of modal combinations,
whereas
57
the two public s e r v a n t s did not. 2 . 2 . Other ways of e x p r e s s i n g
modality
(i) Modal adjuncts Apart usuality,
from
the
opinion
modal and
adjuncts
already
presumption,
mentioned, v i z . p r o b a b i l i t y ,
other
types
important functions in the argumentative process,
were
found
to
fulfil
including:
a) asertive ( Ί assure you ): 1
(35) manufacturing industry r e a l l y does have a r e a l boost (d)^ b) admissive ( Ί
admit'):
(36) because frankly that is not going to convince the public
(b)
c) predictive ('How e x p e c t e d ? ' ) : (37) i t ' s not s u r p r i s i n g that a whole new era is opening up ( g ) d)
adjuncts
of
intensity
and
degree;
again
'high'
values
figure
most
frequently: (38) t h a t ' s quite wrong (d) (39) they considered the presentation of the paper totally wrong (e) (40) this case is j u s t one very specific situation
(d).
( i i ) Use of emphatic 'Do' The main point worth noting here is that emphatic do occurs in places where it would not commonly occur
in
'normal'
conversation
i.e.
whereas
it is normally used to contrast with or contradict a previous assertion
e.g.
He's a poor golfer but he does play tennis well, in political interviews it occurs
much
more frequently.
The following
three examples
are
all
cases
where the speaker is not contradicting or contrasting: (41) I do think t h e r e ' s a real case for a Royal Commission (c) (42) This is a government which does think f a r ahead
(d)
(43) 1 do want to see parents given a wider choice in education
(i).
( i i i ) Metalinguistic comments For
our
purposes
we
are
only
interested
in
those
metalinguistic
comments which have a modal s i g n i f i c a n c e . Thus we exclude from consideration expressions such a s As I s a i d . Examples of metalinguistic comments which have a role in the argumentative process a r e : obl(44) What 1 have to say
(c)
58 incl(45) I ' l l just add
(a)
prob(46) I may s a y Excluding mean',
(b).
those e x p r e s s i o n s which seem, to act as h e s i t a t i o n d e v i c e s
'you
know'),
metalinguistic
comments
can
serve
as
a
(Ί
means
of defence: (47) I'm not s a y i n g people are d e c a n t a b l e for t h e i r a c t i o n s ,
(c)
a s an emphasiser: (48) but what I am s a y i n g
(j)
or a s a means of d i s g u i s i n g or p r e s e n t i n g o n e ' s opinion a s
objective/reason-
able: (49) i t ' s f a i r to s a y ( j ( i v ) Maximising The 'high'
use
devices
of
values
).
these found
can in
be all
linked the
(50) t h i s most d i f f i c u l t task
to
the
phenomenon
interviews.
For
example,
of
the
use
of
superlatives:
(c)
(51) an i n d u s t r y which i s the f i n e s t establishment
(e)
pronouns: (52) almost a l l the media ( . . . ) were s a y i n g (53) w e ' r e a l l a b s o l u t e l y horrified Once
again,
the
function
(c)
(b).
appears
to
be
to
emphasise
a
point,
to present o n e ' s p e r s o n a l opinion a s a g e n e r a l (or g e n e r a l l y accepted) 3.
expressed
principally
in
statements
(questions and o f f e r s ) being ments and commands are Ί
very
rare.
The use of modality by p o l i t i c i a n s the
viewees
speakers'
own
preferred
want/intend
to d o ' .
of
o:im
Furthermore,
types.
This
commands,
modality
the other two types
The b a s i c meanings of these
state-
want'.
suggests
As was
about what
Ί
in our material
that they prefer to be non-
and this i s e s p e c i a l l y borne out by the absence
inclination.
to talk
and
think' and Ί
committal if at a l l p o s s i b l e , of
truth.
Conclusion As far a s r e l a t i o n s h i p with Mood i s concerned,
is
or
pointed
'needs to be done
tendency
is
we
noted
have
out
reinforced the
use
by of
earlier, 1
the
inter-
rather than what the
preponderance
metaphor in
order
to d i s g u i s e the s p e a k e r ' s own w i s h e s / o p i n i o n s . Finally,
the
use
of
modality
in
the
political
interviews
which
we
59
studied
tends
to
illustrate
defensive'.
All
statements,
combinations
serve
as
'paradox'
ways
the of
the
devices
mentioned
that viz.
the use
interviewee of
is
metaphor,
'on
non-committal.
the
less
certain
After you
all, are,
argument,
following the
more
the
objectifying
which either complicate or d i s g u i s e the
being
(1985:340),
fact
Halliday's likely
you
are to use these t y p e s . We do not suggest that these features are peculiar to political but
we may
offer the following
tentative
conclusion:
given
i s "the area of meaning between yes and no", it seems from our brief)
study
that politicians
are
reluctant
or negative replies to the interviewer's
discourse,
that
modality
(admittedly
to give unequivocally
positive
questions.
NOTES 1.
" P o l i t i c a l " in this c a s e is used in the broad sense i . e . to refer to any kind of interview with the s t a t i n g , defending and opposing of p o l i c i e s .
2.
List of Interviewees ( a ) Michael Meacher, Shadow Secretary for Health and Social Services; (b) Ray Whitney, Junior Minister for Health; (c) Alan Bedford, Chairman, British Association of Social Workers; (d) Nigel Lawson, Chancellor of the Exchequer; (e) Peter Walker, Minister of the Environment; (f) Chris Smith, Member of Select Committee on the Environment; (g) Bernard Thomas, Chairman of Unity Trust (Trade Union Bank); (h) Andrew Bennett, Labour spokesman on Education; (i) James Pawey, Conservative spokesman on Education; (j) Ivor Stanbrook, Member of Select Committee for Home A f f a i r s .
3.
Halliday distinguishes between 'congruent' and 1 incongruent' means of expression. According to him, the use of metaphor pervades a l l l a n g u a g e . For example: Mary has blue eyes - incongruent/metaphorical; Mary's eyes are blue - congruent. This above example also serves to show that the 'incongruent' form is often the unmarked, or more u s u a l form.
4.
A famous example of this was provided by the Profuma s c a n d a l of 1962 in Britain. A g i r l involved in the s c a n d a l , or being told that the Minister concerned had denied having an a f f a i r with her replied simply, "Well he would, wouldn't he?". This has since become something of a political c a t c h p h r a s e .
5.
The function of such adjuncts a s certainly, r e a l l y , absolutely, etc. is expressed by Halliday (1985:340)1 "The importance of modal features in the grammar of interpersonal exchanges lies in an apparent paradox on which the entire system rests - the fact that we only say we are certain when we are not". Thus, I t ' s certainly true contains an element of doubt that I t ' s true does not.
60 REFERENCE Halliday,
M.A.K. (1985). Arnold.
An
Introduction
to Functional
Grammar.
Edward
7 Towards a Procedural Analysis of Argumentative Operators in Texts Lita Lundquist
The title of this paper calls for certain elucidations which at the same time may serve to specify the theoretical framework of the
interdisciplinary
approach
I
shall
suggest
here
for
the
analysis of argumentation. First, by merely
'text' is meant written texts, of any kind, i.e. not
texts
considered Secondly,
belonging
to be the
to
text-types
argumentatively
notion
of
or
which
are
traditionally
rhetorically
'argumentative
interesting.
operators'
refers
to
specific linguistic expressions, such as 'almost', 'only,' 'more than', an
'little',
'a little', the function of which is to yield
argumentative
orientation
or
argumentative
value
for
utterance in which the expression appears. Thirdly, with cedural analysis',
the 'pro-
I allude to the fact that what is aimed at,
as an ultimate and perhaps Utopian goal, is a model which represents the interpretation of written texts as a dynamic process of building up the argumentative structure of the text, by a series of successive decision procedures. Thus, three different disciplines, at least, are involved in the present approach to argumentation; namely, first a text-theoretical approach, which views texts as communicative units having a
coherent
prevailing
argumentation intentional
structure,
goal.
because
Secondly,
according to which argumentation
a
of
the
linguistic
producer's approach,
is encoded at the level of La
Langue, in specific linguistic expressions; and thirdly, a cognitive
approach
is suggested,
mental process with
specific
which views
interpretation
semantic-cognitive procedures
identifying and anticipating argumentative structure.
as a for
62 What combines these three approaches with argumentation hypothesis
that
the
several different
process
of
interpreting
texts
is the
involves
inferential systems, one of which is made up
of specific argumentative deductions, activated by the argumentative
operators.
A
text-theoretical
hypothesis
adds
to
this
that the argumentative orientation activated at the beginning of the text initiates an "argumentative program" which governs the interpretation of the subsequent text as a coherent whole, or as a "single mental model" (Johnson-Laird 19S3). Linguistic description of 'argumentative operators'. The phenomenon of linguistic expressions containing an argumentative meaning can be illustrated by the following examples of 'even', 'almost' and 'only': 1
1. Bill likes mary. 2. Even Bill likes Mary.
2
1. John is 6 feet tall. 2. John is almost 6 feet tall. 3. John is only 6 feet tall.
Traditionally,
semanticists have been
inclined
to banish
such
expressions to a pragmatic or a rhetorical component, in order to
keep
the
truth-conditional
semantics
clear
of
disturbing
side-effects. In fact, in truth-conditional terms, 'even P', as in 1, has the same meaning as 'P', whereas
'P', and
'almost P' is equivalent
'only P'
to
in 2 conveys
'not-P'. In order to
explain the evident differences in meaning between the sentences in 1, and between those in 2, linguists have been obliged to add something 'even',
else for
to
the
instance,
semantic has
been
description. described
Peters 1979) as consisting of two parts, tional part, and contributes
truth
conditional
(in
meaning
Karttunen
of and
first a truth condi-
secondly of a conventional
to the
The
implicature
meaning,
the
which
existential
implication that there exist other people beside Bill who like Mary, and furthermore the scalar implication that of the people under consideration Bill is the least likely to like Mary. As to
63 'almost', 1981,
radically
proposing
tures, tity,
a
based
in
the
by
as
found
in
conversational
a
or
value
primitive
and
Ducrot
"integrated of
and
these
and
Quan-
'not-P'. introduced
(1983)
in
rhetoric",
socalled
integrated
Sadock
implica-
of C o o p e r a t i o n
' a l m o s t P' c o n v e y s
Anscombre
linguistics"
argumentative
operators
of
is
in the s e m a n t i c d e s c r i p t i o n h a s b e e n
France,
"argumentative views
scheme
to e x p l a i n t h a t
change
recently,
reasoning
explanation
o n the G r i c e a n p r i n c i p l e s
in o r d e r
A radical
a
pragmatic
part
their which
argumentative of
the
basic
meaning. Extending least
the a n a l y s i s of
two u t t e r a n c e s ,
Anscombre
t h a t the a r g u m e n t a t i v e an
utterance,
different
and
isolated utterances and
operators
they
at
1.
C a n J o h n r e a c h the u p p e r
shelf?
Yes, he
tall.
No, h e
is a l m o s t 6 feet is o n l y 6 feet
P'
following
with
show
tative orientation which 'P' w i t h
the v a l u e
argumentative not
'not-P'
the
same
not
tall',
t a t i o n of The
as
in
which
the
'almost
also
the
This
and
approach.
contradicts
of
the
'only
argumen-
'P', a n d that
provides
'almost
'not-P', strict to
and
an
approach.
as the
yields
demonstrates
meaning
orientation
of
radically
assertions
P'
to
truth-conditional
description
tative operators ters .
that
'only P' as b e i n g e q u i v a l e n t
semantic
utterance
in p o s i t i v e
'he is t a l l ' .
argumentative
are
tall.
is e q u i v a l e n t
perspective,
which
that P'
from
continuation
'P'
and
Only
P'
has
meaning
logical
'he
is
interpre-
'P'.
constraints involves
an
is
which
the
argumen-
i m p o s e u p o n the a r g u m e n t a t i v e o r i e n t a t i o n of
its
of
tall.
'almost P'
negations
constraints
tall.
5. *Yes, h e is o n l y 6 feet examples
the
in a t r u t h - c o n d i t i o n a l
3. *No, h e is a l m o s t 6 feet
These
results
2. 4.
test
i m p o s e u p o n the c o n t i n u a t i o n
arrive
from t h o s e o b t a i n e d
Ducrot
to s e q u e n c e s of a t
the
following
an
parame-
64 Significance 'John
is
and relevance.
only
6
feet
In
tall',
both
argumentative-propositional ject
χ possesses
Scalar
value.
value
of
ascending point.2
of
which
Ρ to a
Although
Only
both to
degree
'almost
P,
implying
P',
can
be
'Pd(x)'
they
P'
tall*
and
ascribed
the
(i.e.
d),
and
do
so
the e x a m p l e s a b o v e s h o w t h a t
scale,
6 feet
on
a
the
movement other
'only
in
P'
towards
hand,
a
fixed,
activates
a
the
In
3,
or n e g a t i v e
'almost
6
of
whereas
'only 6 f e e t t a l l '
4
practical
contexts
m o s t P' a n d
scalar
involving
is
it.
result
' a l m o s t P'
ly. H o w e v e r , 5
it.
In o r d e r
operator
may
Anscombre
(1984)
and
question.
for
the
upper
ob-
shelf,
other
properties,
In
'al-
orientation:
$.
continuation
and
'only P'
is a l s o
positive-
possible:
It c o s t s o n l y 10 $.
to e x p l a i n
activate
of
the r e v e r s e
oriented,
2. B u y it. It c o s t s a l m o s t Topos.
the
in
of
It c o s t s a l m o s t 10 $
following
1. D o n ' t b u y
reaching
predication
is n e g a t i v e l y
the
of
an
descending
assignment
argument
a
decisive
is s e e n n e g a t i v e l y as a h i n d r a n c e .
2. B u y it. It c o s t s o n l y 10 where
is
a positive
'only P' m a y t r i g g e r
1. D o n ' t b u y
value
to the g r a d e d p r o p e r t y
tall'
taining other
the
the
values
feet
Ρ
scalar
'almost P' i n i t i a t e s
Closely
with
convey
different
value.
positive
ob-
the p r o p e r t y
s c a l e w h e r e the d e g r e e Pd r e c e i v e s a n e g a t i v e connected
'the
significance.!
significance
directions;
is a l m o s t
description
the p r o p e r t y
is a s c r i b e d a v a l u e of
'John
two
10
the
$.
fact
reverse
Ducrot
(1984
that
the
same
argumentative
argumentative a)
introduce
trajectories, the
notion
of
'topos'. Α
topos
ledge,
is that
a
lieu
commun,
serves as basis
a
piece
for
the
of
common
inference
background that
there
knowexists
65 a
graded
relation
consequent. noted
in
This
the
between
two
implicative
following
scales, relation
canonical
form:
(the l e s s ) P, the m o r e
(the less)
C .
In 4,
'almost'
the p r e s e n c e
a n d its s y m m e t r i c T1
The
more
to b u y Tl'
The
f o r m u l a t i o n Tl'
expensive
less
expensive
between
two
,
'only'
the
scales
i.e.
triggers
and 'the
the
is more
topos
T1
respectively:
something
is,
the
less
something
is,
the m o r e
it
is
reasonable
it is
reasonable
it.
In 6 h o w e v e r ,
the a r t i c u l a t i o n of
reverse conclusion The
and
antecedent
it.
to b u y
T2
of
the
cheaper
triggers
'almost P' a n d
the o p p o s i t e
something
is,
the
less
'only P' w i t h
a
topos: it
is r e a s o n a b l e
to
buy
it. T2'
The
less
buy
it.
cheap
something
Argumentative operators The
phenomena
topoi,
which
certain to
of
be
are
linguistic
important
in
is,
the
ticipate
significance,
scalar
parts
argumentative
of
the
expressions
to a
give
approach
of
the
seems
to
text. be
a
representations
or
depended
fact,
it
proved,
now
the
reasonable
orientation
to
basis
Furthermore, of on
the a
to
to a s s u m e ,
the
argumentative
this
microlevel structure
operators
the
the par-
at
the
existing
process,
semantics still
me
argumentative
to
interpretation it
s e e m to
argumentation
new
contribution
though
that
for a n a l y s i n g h o w
at
referential
and
orientation
approach
inferences
promising
models
is p l a u s i b l e that
and
value,
up a g l o b a l a r g u m e n t a t i v e
have
until
is
to a n u t t e r a n c e ,
text-linguistic
constraints
in b u i l d i n g
macrolevel
it
texts
since they yield a solid theoretical argumentative
more
remains
function
as
which
only.3
to
in be
semantic
66 procedures for identifying and predicting argumentative
sequen-
ces in a text. The following text-example is the first sentence of a preface to of a historical person 4
the biography
(the last wife of Louis
XIV) : 6
A sa mort, en 1719, Francoise de Maintenon laissait pres de 80 volumes de lettres
The presence of 'pres de' ('almost'), triggers, according to the linguistic description above, the identification of the following argumentative orientation: 'she left almost 80 volumes of letters'; the quantity of letters is significant the scale is ascending the utterance has a positive orientation the antecedent of a topos of the form < the more letters > is initiated. However, in order to pass from this local identification of the argumentative orientation of an opening utterance to predicting the
global
specific
argumentative
expectations
structure
are
needed.
at
text
Borrowing
level, some
text-type terms
from
Cognitive Science, we may say that the argumentative operators function bottom-up, whereas the text-type specific expectations function top-down; and that the interpretation of the argumentative structure is comparable to a left-corner parser it starts bottom-up
in that
in the left corner on the first linguistic
input, and then predicts top-down what is coming next.5 In our text-example, the text-type is a preface to the "memoirs of
the
wife
of Louis XIV",
historical biography Of
a
preface
are
are,
in reality,
a
since they are written by another person. predicted
classes of justification by positively
memoirs which
oriented
the
text-typical
argumentative
(of choice of subject, method, etc.), arguments,
and
defense
against
antici-
67 pated
criticism,
graphy,
which
is p r o b a b l y
o n the o t h e r h a n d ,
expectations
about
material,
opposed
as
for
inaugurates a
instance
to
the
imaginary
a b o u t a f a c t u a l m e t h o d as o p p o s e d If w e
combine
these
argumentative
top-down
orientation
gumentative program
negatively set
use
the
l i k e the
of
of
authentic
material,
first
i.e.
expectations
sentence,
-
material
-
j u s t i f i c a t i o n of the
-
method.
direction
This
argumentative
more
letters
program
the
an
ar-
following:
letters
positive
with
we get
the q u a n t i t y of
scale,
source
expectations
-
ascending
bio-
approach.
the q u a n t i t y of is s i g n i f i c a n t
A
epistemological
to a f i c t i o n a l
text-typical
of
signaled.
triggers
(authentic material),
is
a
authentic
significant
topos
of
applied
the
the m o r e b a s i s
type:
for a
. H a d the text
started:
'Mme de Μ . l e f t o n l y 80 v o l u m e s of the
reverse
pointing
in
argumentative
program
the
( 1 9 8 1 :
62-63).
Although the translation of the last
clause is adequate, animus may refer also to the soul as the seat of the will, and incubo can also mean "to pass the night in a temple to receive a divine message"
(Cassell's).
Such linguistic
inferences only strengthen an already strong case: Kepler explicitly calls this autobiographical process a complete conversion which, nevertheless, was not undergone rashly: quae me in Copernici partes pertraxerit. sectam amplexus sum ( 1 9 8 1 : comment.
Neque tamen temere
78-79).
. . . hanc
This passage deserves further
Crucial to its meaning is an adverb repeated from an
similar passage in the Narratio --the
very
Moreover, the passage occurs
in a section referring to the Narratio, in a book that republishes the Narratio as an appendix.
Thus it seems reasonable to suggest
that it was Rheticus who provided Kepler with the model for his rational conversion, his shift from one paradigm to another, although sufficient scientific reasons were
wanting.
354 The shift to Copernicanism in the sixteenth and early
seventeenth
centuries involved disruptive change on the part of people trained to expect intellectual justification for such change.
Because
those who initially altered allegiance knew they lacked sufficient scientific justification for their actions, they were bound to find attractive a model like that of rational conversion, one that allowed them to bracket their doubts, and continue their work: the beginnings of Copernicanism cannot be separated from the inner struggles of trained intellects, or from the personal influence of master on disciple.
Although the eventual disappearance of
narrative presence in heliocentric astronomy contributes to the illusion that this science is objective in the sense that its development did not depend on the conscious engagement of individual wills, rhetorical analysis teaches us otherwise. But I would be misrepresenting the Copernican revolution if I ended by giving the impression that its rhetorical component was merely a psychological patch between paradigms.
On the contrary, the
conflict between Copernicus' uncompromising realism, and the deficiencies of the actual system he developed, had a distinctly positive force: it acted as a century-long heuristic, inspiring a line of scientists that stretched from Brahe to Newton.
Drawing
their inspiration from this source, these scientists developed a universe they judged structurally and dynamically adequate: a mathematically simple and harmonious total system, in accord with the laws of a new physics, and precisely descriptive and predictive of celestial appearances, a system that accurately described the actual motions of real celestial objects.
It was out of the
efforts of Copernicus' successors, then, that there emerged a heliocentric universe, far different from that of Copernicus, but one more nearly in conformity with the explanatory ideal first asserted publicly in Narratio Prima, a work in which science, falling short of its aim, motivated rhetoric, and rhetoric in turn motivated a more adequate science.
In my view, then, to ignore the
rhetoric of Narratio Prima is radically to misunderstand the Copernican revolution.
355
References Armitage, A. (1962 ). Copernicus: the Founder of Modern Astronomy. A. S. Barnes. Aristotle.
(1975).
Aristotle's Posterior Analytics
. J. Barnes,
trans. Clarendon Press. Cohen, I. B. (1985).
Revolution in Science. Harvard University
Press. Copernicus, N. (1971). Commentariolus. In Three Copernican Treatises. E. Rosen, trans, and ed. 3rd edn. Octagon. Feyerabend, P. (1975).
Against Method. Verso.
Fleck, L. (1981 ). Genesis and Development of a Scientific Fact. T. J. Trenn and R. K. Merton, eds.; F. Bradley and T. J. Trenn, trans. University of Chicago Press. Grant, E. (1962). Late medieval thought, Copernicus, and the scientific revolution. Journal of the History of Ideas, 23: 197-220. Kepler, J. (1981). Mysterium Cosmographicum. The Secret of the Universe. A. M. Duncan, trans. Abaris. Koestler, A. 1968 . The Sleepwalkers.
Macmillan.
Koyre, Α., 1973 The astronomical revolution:
Copernicus—
Kepler--Bore11i. R. E. W. Maddison, trans. Hermann. Lakatos, I. 1983 . Why did Copernicus' research programme supersede ptolemy's? In J. Worrall and G. Currie, eds. The Methodology of Scientific Research Programmes: Papers.
Vol.1. Cambridge University Press,
Philosophical
168-92.
Neugebauer, 0., 1970 . The Exact Sciences in Antiquity. 2nd ed. Brown University Press. Prowe, L., ed.1967 . Nicolaus Coppernicus. Vol. 2. Otto
Zeller.
Rheticus., 1971. Narratio Prima. In
Three Copernican Treatises. E.
Rosen, trans, and ed. 3rd edn. Octagon. Ross, D. 1971 . Aristotle. Methuen & Co.
356
tfestman, R. S. (1972). The comet and the cosmos: Kepler, Maestlin and the Copernican hypothesis. In Colloquia Copernicana 1. Studia Copernica V. E t u d e s Sur L'Audience De La Theorie Heliocentrique. Polska Akademia Nauk, 7-30. . (1975). The Wittenberg interpretation of the Copernican theory. In The Nature of Scientific
Discovery:
A Symposium Commemorating the 500th Anniversary of the Birth of Nicholas Copernicus. 0. Gingerich, ed. Smithsonian Institute
Press.
40 Rationality, Cognitive Science, and the Theory of Argumentation John Furlong
"Logic
is concerned
with arguments, good and bad....It is the
logician's business to serve the reasonable. realm
of arguments,
Therefore,
it is he who distinguishes
good
in the
from
bad"
(Kalish, Montague, and Mar, 1980). This confident assertion has become the minority opinion among students of reasoning and argumentation.
Since the late 1950's, the
relevance of formal logic to the analysis and evaluation of arguments has been assailed vigorously from many salients, degrees of disavowal.
permitting
For instance, if "irrelevance" merely means
that logical constraints are too wide for informal argument analysis, there is little to quarrel with.
Although informal fallacies,
and indeed, most pragmatic and semantic conditions of satisfaction in argumentation require much more sensitive criteria for evaluation than formal logic, this underdetermination alone could not destroy the authority
of the
logician, for no successful argument should
violate the logical canon.
Even the most severe attacks upon
ultimate consistency of logic
the
(see Cherniak, 1984) leave at least
some role for logical constraints.
At the very worst, on this view,
the logician merely wanes in status--his job becoming part-time, his authority diminished, but not cancelled. However, logician
to continue
may have
occupation, disintegrated.
the
the employment metaphor, even though the
retained major
some
purpose
functions of
his
old
from
his
job seems
This purpose--ensuring the rationality
of
previous to
have
thought
and speech--seems today to have become the trust of historicosocial consensus.
Grounding rationality in consensus, or tradition,
has garnered
widespread
Toulmin
Kabermas.
and
appeal and united thinkers as diverse as Toulmin,
for
instance
(inspired
by
Wittgenstein) establishes rationality not in "logical or conceptual
358 systems
as
such" but
in
"human a c t i v i t i e s
or e n t e r p r i s e s "
There is m u c h to be said for this approach.
(1972).
True r a t i o n a l i t y
to be found, one w o u l d imagine, n e s t l e d in d e n s e l y - b r a n c h e d
ought
detail.
Complex rules of g o o d n e s s of fit and a p p r o p r i a t e n e s s of w a r r a n t
are
far too splayed out and contentful to be c o n s t r a i n e d by logic in any significant w a y .
In other words, we n e e d to k n o w
much
more
than
logic in order to reason well, and there exist p o w e r f u l a r g u m e n t s to the effect that this "much m o r e " is enough in itself to a c c o u n t human
rationality.
The that
for
main
difficulty
its authority
with
does
not
the
consensual
appear
strong
approach,
enough
n o t i o n of rationality we are a c c u s t o m e d to.
to
however, sustain
It seems that,
consensual view, either one must search, perhaps
in vain,
is the
on the
for
what
"the c o n s e n s u s - p r o d u c i n g power consists in" (Habermas, 1985), or one argues that c o n s e n s u s tion (Rorty, 1979).
is all we are going to get by way of
Hence, if we opt for consensus, what we gain in
scope we lose in the cogency of our inferences. logic,
to
therefore
turn blind,
valida-
a Kantian metaphor, then,
equally,
is that
consensual
If the problem w i t h
it is c o n t e n t l e s s
rationality,
and
keen-eyed
for content, is empty of authority. Now,
I am not going to argue here
necessarily Rather, formal
bad or that
I would logic
maintain
as
relativism
like
to suggest
the
anchor
of
that this
is to be a v o i d e d
that
there may
intelligent
a robust rationality.
state of affairs
For
the
at
all
costs.
be a way to
reject
deportment
and
it w o u l d
still
sake of d i s c u s s i o n
limit myself to showing how such an argument could be m a d e ; making
involve m u c h more detail
is
I will actually
than we have space for
in
this paper. I w o u l d like first to appeal to a very simple m e t a p h o r .
If one
cannot build u p o n rock, it w o u l d benefit him to dig as deeply as he can into the soil under hand.
All is not lost,
in other words,
the b u i l d e r does not find rock, as long as he can drive his tion
deeply
enough.
construction
What
analogy
is
I want
that
we
to may
elicit be
able
from
this
to
derive
founda-
primitive all
v a l i d a t i o n we need from nonlogical rationality
if we sink our
deeply enough
if our
rationality
in h u m a n nature.
were
the q u a n t i t y
For of
instance,
brain
cells
such
if
the posts
criterion
for
that v/henever χ
p o s s e s s e s at least 10 b i l l i o n of them, then χ is rational, or if the criterion
involved
some
property
of
the
human
genome,
we
would
359 consider our rationality w e l l - g r o u n d e d since these features w o u l d be universal properties of the h u m a n species. the c r i t e r i o n
O n the other extreme, if
for rationality w e r e raw consensus, that is, w h e n e v e r
x, y, a n d ζ confer rationality
on an a r g u m e n t a t i v e ploy,
then
that
utility is rational for x, y, and z, we face a very serious devaluat i o n of the currency of Some
cognitive
rationality.
and
developmental
psychologists
have
tried
solve the problem of grounding by claiming that h u m a n c o g n i t i o n as
a matter
of
experimental
fact, d r i v e n
by formal
logic.
and others have suggested that the very m a c h i n e r y of h u m a n is
governed,
on
the
relevant
level,
by
invariant
to is,
Piaget
inference
logical
rules.
Piaget stops short of a r g u i n g that we are "hardwired" for logic, but the mental
logic
thesis
strikes d e e p e r than social c o n v e n t i o n as a
ground for rationality. of argument
U n f o r t u n a t e l y , we have already urged a line
that w o u l d make this thesis o t i o s e - - e v e n if humans w e r e
to possess a mental logic, it w o u l d be too poor a guide in everyday reasoning those
and
using
paradigm,
argument.
the have
Moreover,
"information shown
that
recent
processing"
there
students
or
of
is no reason at all
inferential processes are logical.
cognition,
"cognitive
Some p h i l o s o p h e r s
science"
to think and
our
psycholo-
gists have gone so far as to conclude from this data that man could be an irrational animal Recently, celebrated
(see Stich,
however,
students
Phillip
of
interpretation without
human
1985).
Johnson-Laird,
inference,
defaulting
has
the
thesis that h u m a n beings
but that what underlies be reasoning without
More
be v a l i d reasoning without logic"
of
is a mental
surprisingly, (1983).
of a
cognitive
intricacies question:
science.
what
implications
to
pursue
would
rational
the
thought,
logic.
There
can
perhaps,
there
can
be
a more
this
literature
forego d i s p l a y i n g
instead
there
On
Johnson-Laird makes
In this paper we will
of his a r g u m e n t
most
different
stance.
case at length in Mental Models, already a c l a s s i c in the of
the
"it is w o r t h giving up,
are capable
this ability
logic.
taken
to the P i a g e t i a n
basis of the evidence, argues J o h n s o n - L a i r d , not
one
the
manageable
for rationality
if
the
J o h n s o n - L a i r d thesis w e r e true? The
linchpin
of
cognitivist
theories
is
that
representations guide humans in negotiating their world. that such representations
m u s t be computational
(Fodor,
internal Many argue 1975),
that
is, must be d r i v e n by formal m a n i p u l a t i o n s over symbols, m u c h like a
360 digital computer. in w h i c h
information
controversy which
But since there exists an infinite n u m b e r of ways
about
actually
Johnson-Laird
can
be
which
"goes
instantiation
on"
asserts
instantiated, in
his
means of m o d e l s w h i c h are
the
is
considerable
is " p s y c h o l o g i c a l l y
human
theory.
there
mind.
Humans
It
is
represent
1) p s y c h o l o g i c a l l y
real,"
here
that
the w o r l d
real--since
the
by way
people actually, for instance, reason, is e x p l a i n e d by them, and, 2) semantically
instead
level, m e a n i n g remarkable contains cannot
of
instead
fact,"
syntactically
of
logic governs h u m a n
contends J o h n s o n - L a i r d ,
terms w i t h an implicit
be
driven:
completely
at
the
relevant
inference.
"that
"It is a
natural
language
'logic' that is so powerful that it
encompassed
by
formal
rules
of
inference"
(1983: 140). In order to argue from these facts of mental inference
processing
to a rationality of sufficient scope and authority, we m u s t J o h n s o n - L a i r d ' s theory to satisfy three 1.
require
conditions:
wherever a d e d u c t i o n is v a l i d a c c o r d i n g to the rules of formal logic,
it m u s t be valid a c c o r d i n g to the theory of
mental models and, conversely, wherever a d e d u c t i o n is invalid formally, the same d e d u c t i o n must be
invalid
according to the theory of m e n t a l models; 2.
the theory should be able in principle to account rules of " v a l i d i t y "
not covered under the canon of formal 3. Now,
inferential
reasoning.
I am after, as I have said, w h a t happens
such a theory system
logic;
the theory should be a b l e to a c c o u n t for failure in everyday
of
is accepted.
inference
may
though it does not employ
for
for "everyday" a r g u m e n t a t i o n that are
If
it
perform
is true, in
rules of
for
to rationality instance,
a n entirely
inference,
logical
inferential
or any other sort of m a c h i n e r y corresponding
to a logical
(1983: 130),
the
then
Johnson-Laird procedure"
it is possible
extrapolates
performed
from
on m e n t a l
to
satisfy
human
models
of
first
inference
way
calculus" "effective
terms.
is an e l a b o r a t i o n of one semantic rule:
if there
way
the
true
conclusion valid.
premises
can
be
interpreted
to
be
even
schemata
procedure that
"A
condition.
an
syllogistic
that
if
The
is any
while
is false, then the syllogism is invalid; o t h e r w i s e
the
it is
J o h n s o n - L a i r d covers all 64 p o s s i b l e pairs of premises,
and
shows h o w special a t t e n t i o n to the number of m e n t a l m o d e l s needed to
361 cover
all
possible
same
success
as
has
written
do
humans
formal
a
manipulating
program
perform
inferential inadequate
this
so
poorly
is
appealing
to
because
to
explain
inadequate
second demand
argumentation.
by
the
humans
from.
space
to
a
in
Hence,
how
Why,
then,
types
of
function
of
humans
that
the t h e o r y
perform
humans
represent
for
Johnson-Laird,
are
humans
and
procedure
various
flaw
the
Johnson-Laird
tasks?
how
how
logic"
fact,
ensure
(1983: 471).
design
not suffer
n e c e s s a r y f o r the p u r s u i t of The
a
will
effective
indicates
"mental
of
In
deductive
space,
does
able
the
universally
memory
premises
inference.
on
made
program
the
successfully
errors working
of
automating
I believe,
models
task
of
again,
Johnson-Laird's without
rules
the m e n t a l m o d e l s
persuasively
mental
interpretations
of
logically
often all
fail
the
at
models
validation.
is e q u a l l y
important
for a n y
serious
theory
If m e n t a l m o d e l s j u s t m i m i c k e d the s u c c e s s of
of
formal
l o g i c w i t h o u t a f f o r d i n g m o r e r a n g e , w e m i g h t r e g a r d the t h e s i s a s
no
more
it
is,
useful
the mental
many
more
logic tive
of
models
least,
'if'
and
accounted holds
'or1, of so
for
able have
favored
by
and
logic.
Roger
informal
analyzing
Govier
argument--and
Take an example
(1985:
27-33)
entirely least
upon
context,
nor
t h a t the " e s s e n t i a l
its f u l f i l l i n g specifying as
recognition
some
upon point"
corollary
Β but
the
this
paper,
Johnson-Laird
remember,
has make
colleagues,
from
supplying
refuting
that are parallel
seems
T h e m a k i n g of s u c h
form."
It
is
not
an
depend
arguable
at
in v i r t u e
of
semantic
f o r m of i n f e r e n c e
as
literature
that
cogency--does
are
theory
insofar
the
observes
of J o h n s o n - L a i r d ' s of Β
the
like
of the a r g u m e n t w o r k s
conclusion
c o n c l u s i o n of a r g u m e n t A is
its
"logical
t h a t if o n e u s e s the s a m e
in a r g u m e n t In
of
transi-
logicians--and
arguments,
i n d e p e n d e n t of " l o g i c a l w o r d s . " the
and
in
complex
proportions,
principles
extended
and,
The
formal
As
explaining
Furthermore,
a r g u m e n t s by c o n s t r u c t i n g r e d u c t i o a r g u m e n t s o f t e n to w o r k
all.
Schank
thesis.
of
reasoning,
explain
bedeviled
models
semantic operations.
informal
language to
quantifiers,
which
explaining
assumptions,
are
natural
be
multiple
for o n t h e m e n t a l
promise
hidden
in
should
inferences
"unreal" Venn diagrams.
t h e s i s o p e n s u p the p o s s i b i l i t y
found
at
inferences--all
implicit
they
the psychologically
tactics
principle
of
than
heuristic
in a r g u m e n t A
is u n a c c e p t a b l e ,
then
the
unacceptable. I am
not asking
you
g o o d o n the f u l f i l l m e n t
of
to
examine
these
whether
conditions.
362 I am only asking you to speculate about w h a t r a t i o n a l i t y w o u l d like if^ J o h n s o n - L a i r d ' s thesis is true. a ground
for
rationality
closer to grounding hands.
that
I submit that we w o u l d have
is as d e e p as we need,
E x a c t l y w h a t sort of grounding semantic p r o c e s s i n g gives us
pa t t e r n
to
inferential
deep-structural information, question
we
about
What w a r r a n t s
may the
at
mental
trace possible readjusting
and
grounding
approach
on an
of a g r e e m e n t logic.
interpretations
of
answer
them
w i t h our m o d e l s ,
thanks
applying
to
real
semantically
constitute those
l i m i t e d w o r k i n g m e m o r y , we
to
meanings, until
is the very
rules of
rules
to
(i.e.,
as we go along, the
should
be of
arguments.
clarifying
for
that
to
Habermas's
semantically
then it
process
to
in everyday
either claim validity o r contradiction), this
seem
processing
Since we are all built
premises,
Clearly we d o n ' t know yet what a l l
there
the
is p s y c h o l o g i c a l l y
and to reason w i t h
inferences
since
constraints
least
our a r g u m e n t s
models
Yet, since there is a universal
failure,
semantic
d e r i v e d formal logic cum informal
that,
that is m u c h
in, say, brain cells or genome than in shows of
is, I admit, unclear at this time.
make
look
we
rules
rationality.
are.
We
do
are o f t e n v e r y
know
bad
at
them.
In conclusion, I w o u l d like to part ways a bit w i t h J o h n s o n - L a i r d and w i t h psychology. design
flaw
not
It seems to me that w e c a n c o m p e n s a t e
primarily
by
devising
elegant
individual subjects but by attempting to d i s c o v e r effective
with
the principles
seems that in place of a d e q u a t e memory space we have e a c h other
and
from
(Finnochiarro argued
which
to
that have w e a t h e r e d
of It
past
in arguments
experiments history.
our
reasoning
for our
discover
the
principles
of
reasoning.
(1984) has m a d e a similar o b s e r v a t i o n r e c e n t l y and has
persuasively
for
its acceptance.)
Consensus
and
tradition,
then, are not g u a r a n t o r s of r a t i o n a l i t y ; they are its effects. are,
arguably,
the m o s t
revealing
probes
of
our human
apparatus, and they reflect, obliquely, our ingrained
They
inferential
rationality.
REFERENCES Cherniak, C. (1984). Computational complexity and the universal acceptance of logic. The Journal of P h i l o s o p h y , 81, 739-758.
363
Finnochiarro, Μ. (1984). Informal logic and the theory of reasoning. Informal Logic, §_. Fodor, J. (1975). Press. Govier, T.
The Language of Thought.
(1 985 ).
Logical analogies.
Harvard University
Informal Logic, 7_.
Habermas, J. (1985). Theories of truth. trans. R. Grabau, quoted in W. Harpine, Rhetoric, dialectic and logic. Philosophy and Rhetoric, 1 8 . Johnson-Laird, P. N. (1983). Press.
Mental Models.
Harvard University
Kalish, D. , R. Montague, & G. Mar (1980). Logic: Formal Reasoning. Harcourt, Brace, & Jovanovich. Rorty, R. (1979). University.
Techniques of
Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature.
Stitch, S. (1985). 64, 115-134. Toulmin, S. (1972). Press.
Could man be an irrational animal? Human Understanding.
Princeton Synthese,
Princeton University
41 The External Justification of a Dialectical Consensus P.J. van den Hoven
Introduction Whenever we try to found the validity of our judgements about opinions, we inevitably run up against the Miinchhausentrilemma (Albert 1980). Presently, the most popular escape seems to be to attack one of the horns of the trilemma. We try to show that the point where we break off our chain of supporting arguments isn't arbitrary. We stop when we have reached a consensus. In addition we are aware of the fact that this consensual base is only temporary, maybe even accidental, which means that the consensus can always be terminated. We realize that knowledge and opinions, founded this way, can never possess an absolute validity. I subscribe to this critical approach. For obvious reasons, theorists who follow this approach put much emphasis on the discussion rules; one ought to explore the possibilities of a consensus in the most efficient way. Several authors suggest the dialectical model. These authors do not restrict the use of this model to the traditional universe of dialectical discourse: the philosophical and the scientific debate by which one seeks after 'truth' or knowledge. Van Eemeren & Grootendorst for instance present the dialectical discussion as (part of) a problemsolving strategy for disputes about expressed opinions, without further fundamental curtailment (1984:1-18). This encompasses universes which traditionally are gouverned by rhetoric, for instance the justification of policy claims and juridical decisions. Generally, such problems can be analyzed as problems of choice which ask for a resolution within a time limit. The question I want to pose is, whether this dialectical model
365
fits those problems closely enough to meet the requirements of an adequate problem-solving strategy. I don't think it does. So, the purpose of my investigation is to indicate where and when other strategies, which do not fit into the dialectical model, are necessary. In doing so I try to gain insight into the hidden presuppositions of the dialectical model, and to develop a conception of reasonableness which suits other functions of argumentation, (see also Van Den Hoven 1984, 1985). In this paper I shall direct my attention to one facet: the need for an external justification of the outcome of a dialectical discussion, that is of the consensual base reached by the debaters. Dialectical debaters specify their discussion rules before (and inevitably during) the debate. So the model doesn't guarantee that others will accept these rules too. This means that there is no ground to generalize a reached consensus. Yet, in many problems of choice, the outcome also affects others than the debaters. This can be the outcome in the main dispute, but also the outcome in one of the subdisputes. In such cases, the solution has to be justified to the community concerned too. I emphasize that the topic of my paper is part of a much broader. In my opinion every problem-solving strategy has to be related to a certain type of problems and must also be evaluated in relation to the problems one tries to solve. Traditionally, the dialectical discuss ion as a problem-solving strategy is related to the dialectical type of problem, say how to discover knowledge. My topic is to test this strategy in relation to another type of problem, how to decide a problem of choice, the outcome of which needs an external justification. I shall demonstrate the existence of this type of problem by showing how the settlement of a dispute can influence another dispute between members of the community concerned, members who did not participate in the first dispute. This proves the need for an external justification. I shall explain this external justification is a complicated task; it cannot be carried out by calling on opinions accepted by the community concerned. Internal justification When a judge is appointed to settle conflicts of opinion in a cer-
366 tain context in a certain community
(which is often the case if a
solution has to be reached within a time limit), one must distinguish between the internal and the external argumentative obligations of this judge J. By the internal argumentative obligations I mean the obligations of J to other parties in the peculiar dispute; obligations we may impose on him under the chosen normative argument model. By the external argumentative obligations I mean the obligations of J to the community concerned, also obligations imposed on him under the chosen normative argument model. Let us assume a context. There are two parties P1 and P2. They have a conflict of opinion about the expressed opinion 01 . P1 takes a positive point of view:"It is the case that 01" or
(+ 01). P2
takes a negative point of view:"It is not the case that 01" or (-01) So, there is a compound dispute. J
settles conflicts of opinion
about opinions from the set Ο = ( 01, 02 ..., On ) . Suppose, P1 and P2 cannot reach consensus in a discussion. P1 can't convince P2 that 01 is the case; P2 can't convince P1 that 01 is not the case. Suppose furthermore that this situation blocks certain actions of P1: P1 wants to act according to a situation in which
(+01) is accepted,
but he is not allowed to do so because of the attitude of P2. This blockade can be broken through by a verdict of J. P1 is designated to put the conflict before J. It is not decided yet which party gets the presumption and which party bears the burden of proof. The judge J takes a passive position. Suppose J would give P1 the presumption, which means that P2 bears the burden of proof for
his point of view. If I see it right,
there will be a discussion then between J and P2. Seen as a dialectical discussion, P2 is the protagonist of antagonist; he doubts the tenability of
(-01), and J is the
(-01). P1 plays no other
part than providing the material to feed J *s doubt and to give J the possibility to uphold his doubt notwithstanding the argumentation of P2. When will a presumption arise that J cannot maintain his doubt? That is, when has P2 delivered a prima facie case, so that the burden of rebuttal rests on J? In my opinion this is the case when P2 shows that there is a set of statements S = (SI, S2..., Sn), such that
(- 01) follows from S, and each statement in S falls within one
367 of the next categories C: (1) statements to which J is committed by some competent autority, (2) statements which reflect views apparently held by the community concerned, (3) statements about the facts, held by both P1 and P2, (4) statements of J, expressed in comparable contexts, (5) statements which fit within the pattern of statements expressed by J within comparable contexts. If P2 makes the case, and J accepts
(- 01), then no obligation to-
wards P2 rests on J. If J still refuses to accept
(- 01), then he
is obliged to argue: - either that one of the statements S doesn't fall into one of the categories, - or that notwithstanding the fact that P2 has made a correct prima facie case, it is still reasonable to maintain his doubt. If J accepts
(- 01), it seems reasonable that J explains to his
prompter P1 why he thinks the argumentative material of P1 was insufficient to maintain his doubt. However, it seems clear to me that J is not the protagonist of the standpoint that he can't maintain his doubt, but rather antagonist of P1's standpoint that he can. If P1 wants to argue this standpoint against J, the sources he must draw his argumentative statements from are the same as P2's, so the categories
External
(1)-(5).
justification
So much for the analysis of J's internal argumentative obligations, which can be characterized by the fact that J usually doesn't play the role of protagonist, just antagonist. To gain insight in the external obligations of J, a further analysis of the process of conflict-settlement is necessary. Let's suppose it is the first time a conflict about an opinion 0 is put before J. So there is no casuistry yet. Parties give only one argument for their points of view: P1: "(+ 01), because it is not proved that
(- 01), and the pre-
sumption ought to be given to P1". P2: "(- 01), because it is not proved that sumption ought to be given to P2"
(+ 01), and the pre-
368
Suppose, as we did before, that J gives P1 the presumption. Then it is easy to see that P2 didn't deliver a prima facie case for his point of view and, more important, that P2 won't be able to deliver such a case by further (sub)arguments. It seems unthinkable that there is a set of statements such that they all fall into one of the categories (1)-(5), from which it follows that the presumption ought to be given to P2. Thus, J can simply settle the conflict. He can satisfy the standpoint (- 01). Please note that if J would have given the presumption to P2, P1 would have been in a hopeless position. Also note that J is not obliged to justify internally why he gave P1 the presumption. Both P1 and P2 had an obligation to defend their point of view, according to the discussion rules. By meeting the point of view (+ 01), J doesn't take this point of view against P1 and P2. He just maintains his zero point of view (? 01), which implies that, according to the presumption, the solution is (+ 01). Now let us focus on the external implications. Suppose two other parties, say P3 and P4 have a conflict of opinion about the expressed opinion 02. They learn how J settled the conflict about 01. What do they learn? I think this. If J behaves rationally, he will give the presumption to the positive point of view. Why? Because if the conflict would be put before J, and J would give the presumption to the negative point of view, the other party would now be able to deliver a prima facie case that the presumption ought to be given to him, drawing his argument from category 4 (= statements of J, expressed in comparable contexts). The strength of his case is related to the number of conflicts in which J has given the presumption to the positive point of view. This fact will strongly determine the dispute between P3 and P4, even if they won't put their conflict before J. This applies to all disputes about opinions Ο within the community concerned, because J is appointed to settle these conflicts if parties can't. So, J decided a problem of choice within the community, which we can describe in terms of taking a point of view in respect to an opinion. The opinion A is: For all conflicts of meaning about an opinion 0, the presumption ought to be given to the positive point of view. In respect to this opinion, J takes a positive point of view. But
369
very likely, a large group within the community will doubt the tenability of this point of view. If there would be a discussion between this group within the community and J, J would be obliged to defend his positive point of view in respect to A, according to the dialectical discussion rules. In my opinion, J delivers a prima facie case if he shows that there is a set of statements S so that (+ A) follows from S, and so that each statement in S falls within one of the next categories C: (1) statements to which J is committed by some competent authority, (2) statements which reflect views apparently held by the community concerned, (6) statements which fit into the pattern of statements under (2) (7) statements which J has succesfully defended against the community concerned before. Conclusions Here my analysis ends. Before I can draw my first conclusion, I have to define two concepts, rationality and reasonableness. I'm fully aware of the fact that these are very complex concepts, and that there is no well founded difference between them. So, just for this discussion I stipulate the following, very tentative descriptions. Someone acts rationally if he acts according to explicite rules or to rules which can be made explicite, or feels obliged to justify his acting if he deviates from such a rule by reinterpreting, amending or repealing the rule. Someone acts reasonably if he acts rationally according to rules which are accepted by the community concerned. If you want to accept these descriptions, poor as they are, it will be clear that the rationality of J's acting is presupposed. If not, we can't predict J's acting in future conflicts from his acting in the past. I think this concept of rationality is presupposed in every theory of implied or unexpressed premisses. The question is whether J's acting is also reasonable. If we accept the dialectical model, and say that a rule ought to be accepted by the community if it is well defended according to the model, then there are good reasons to suppose that J's acting often won't be reasonable, because J won't be able to make his prima facie case. Let us have a look at the four categories (1), (2), (6) and (7). Category (1) is a strong one, but only if the authorities filled it. Further,
370
there is the problem that every statement needs an interpretation. If the interpretation ins't clearly correct, J needs additional statements to justify his interpretation. Category (7) of course depends on former successes, based on (1), (2), and (6), so it isn't an independent source. This implies that J must draw his statements on categories (2) and (6). But if one realizes that often the conflicts will proceed from a conflict of interests within the community, one cannot expect these sources to be very rich. So, often J won't be able to make his case. The rationality of J's acting is evident, and arguing the reasonableness seems not attainable. It seems clear to me that this must not lead us to the conclusion that there is no reason for J to argue at all. The alternative is to amend the model we choose because it doesn't seem to meet the requirements of an adequate problem-solving strategy as far as the external justification is concerned. It doesn't meet the requirements because it doesn't fit the type of problems closely enough. In my opinion another model should be proposed to operationalize the concept of reasonableness in these contexts, a model in which 'retorical' elements as the ethos of the judge against the community can be accounted for. My second conclusion is simple but important. If one accepts the existence of external argumentative obligations, and if one accepts that in reality there won't be a discussion between J and the community concerned, this means that J will perform argumentative speech acts within a particular discussion, which cannot be analyzed as necessary acts in terms of this particular discussion. J is not fulfilling his obligations against the parties in the discussion. In other words, the dialectical and thus dialogical approach to argumentation is a great improvement to the monological or even product-directed approach. But there it is still too narrow. My analysis makes clear that a discussion has to be placed within a social context because this context influences the acting of the participators in the discussion.
371
References: Albert, Η. (1980). Traktat über kritische Vernunft 4. verbesserte Auflage, Tübingen Eemeren, F.Η van & R. Grootendorst (1984). Speech Acts in Argumentative Discussions. Dordrecht. Hoven, P.J. van den (1984). Het formuleren van een formele kritiek op een betogende tekst ( Wording a Formal Criticism of an Argumentative Text) . Dordrecht. Hoven, P.J. van den (1985). Het redelijkheidsbegrip binnen een praktische argumentatietheorie (The Concept of Reasonableness in a Theory of Practical Reasoning) In W.B.K. Koning (ed). Taalbeheersing in theorie en praktijk. Dordrecht.
42 Reason and the Theory of Argument Mark L. Weinstein
A r g u m e n t a t i o n in the sense of both the informal
logician
and the dialectician p r e s u p p o s e s that the interlocutors capable of rational discourse and that their
are
discussion
follows tacit normative p r i n c i p l e s that d i s t i n g u i s h it from simple p e r s u a s i o n or m o r e insidious forms of control.
interpersonal
It is the role of the theory of argument to
elucidate these principles and apply the normative or practical understanding that grows out of such theoretical analysis to putative arguments.
successful
Although
there
has been a great deal of work on the theory of argument done by N o r t h A m e r i c a n s in the informal logic and critical thinking m o v e m e n t , there has been little effort
expended
clarifying the underlying claim to rationality and
relating
it to the analysis and e v a l u a t i o n of argument types and c o n t e x t s , especially the most crucial context of c o n c e r n the
—
educational. The m o d e l s of rationality that have exerted the m o s t
influence can be categorized into three m a i n
types.
R a t i o n a l i t y , on the first of these views, is seen as one of a small number of basic h u m a n m e n t a l faculties.
R e a s o n is
m o s t commonly seen in c o n t r a s t to the passions and affords a desirable basis for one of two types of judgment: and p r a c t i c a l .
theoretic
This m o d e l , as in, for e x a m p l e , P l a t o ,
carries some minimal c h a r a c t e r i z a t i o n of the m o d e s of
373 rational d i s c o u r s e , consistency m o s t c r u c i a l l y , and also includes the claim that, in some sense, the rational has a crucial epistemological
faculty
relation to truth, in
particular being essentially adequate to the goal of knowing reality.
This, of course, is the basis for reason being
p r e f e r r e d as the faculty for judgment.
T h i s m o d e l , whether
in Plato or, equally c r u c i a l l y , in F r e u d , d o e s little to describe the details of normal rational functioning; do these theorists provide positive c r i t e r i a for
neither
asserting,
of an individual or of an argument, that he or it is rational. A s Peters
(1980) p o i n t s out about F r e u d , this m o d e l
assumes rational functioning as fundamental, taking as its m a i n goal the offering of an account of the b r e a k d o w n of rational assessment through the interference of (dynamical) elements.
S i m i l a r l y in P l a t o , the
affective underlying
claim that to know the good is to desire the good p l a c e s rational functioning as a state of affairs for which no systemic causal account is necessary. of education and d i a l e c t i c a l
R a t h e r , the process
interchange brings out the
innate capabilities of the reasoner.
For P l a t o , e d u c a t i o n ,
like p s y c h o t h e r a p y , frees the reasoner from the influence of counter-rational the rational
forces; it does not, in itself, construct
faculty.
The second major model p a y s careful attention to the rational function and attempts to enumerate the categories that reason m a n i f e s t s at its most fundamental level.
This
m o d e l , whether in A r i s t o t l e or in K a n t , employs two related but distinct notions of these m o s t fundamental of the devices for rational functioning.
The first sense of
c a t e g o r i e s is closely linked to the analysis of logic as expressed in d i s c o u r s e , and the second sense,
transcending
logic as narrowly c o n s t r u e d , includes the apparatus for understanding objective processes: c r i t e r i a for concepts of causality and of p r e d i c a t i o n .
identity,
Within
this
p a r a d i g m , the analysis of reasoning b e c a m e , with the work of
374
Piaget, a set of minimal categories for cognitive development.
These categories are seen as being articulated
over time in the normal process of development and under the influence of experience through interactive behavior.
Hence
reasoning, even where not interfered with through pathology, is not available to all individuals at all times.
This is
crucial for the distinction between this view and the preceding one, for, given the claim to development, at least some individuals are, in principle, incapable of reasoning. The rational faculties, hierarchically organized, need to be constructed.
And for the child
(or the primitive) no amount
of rational instruction can effect the process of information, since all information is already processed through an earlier
(more primitive) schematism.
Thus,
humans at varying stages of development are, in principle, incapable of reasoning together.
Of course, given an
environment sufficiently rich to warrant increasingly effective rational process, the normal process of assimilation and accommodation yields rational
functioning.
The third most influential model can be attributed in its historical genesis, to the nominalism of the Stoics.
Most
influential in recent times, it sees reason within the context of a social practice.
The criteria for rational
behavior are grounded in social and cultural reality
—
whether the analysis is based on language games or through a community or discipline, where norms play a constitutive role in determining the content of reason.
Implicit in this
view is the potential for a profound relativism, since different milieus, each constitutive of rationality, can manifest incompatible or even incommensurable practices. Views of this sort, whether pragmatist, Marxist, or sociological in character, share the nominalist perspective that denies an essentialist core to reason or even an allencompassing transcendental perspective.
Reason is what
reason does, and what it does, in the most extreme views within this paradigm, are as specific as the different
375 cognitive practices during the various eras and w i t h i n various
domains.
Recent m o v e s in the d e v e l o p m e n t of theories of rationality amalgamate aspects of these three perspectives.
seminal
At the p r e s e n t time, there seem to be two
main t h e o r e t i c focuses.
The first, associated
with
H a b e r m a s , joins F r e u d i a n p e r s p e c t i v e s with, especially, n e o M a r x i s t views.
H e r e , based o n a critique of pragmatism
and
the hermeneutics of D i l t h e y , the notion of the repressed
is
accommodated to a socio-political analysis of concepts and concept use.
This view, especially as codified in H a b e r m a s
(1971) , returns to the P l a t o n i c view of the selftransparency of reason.
A m a l g a m a t i n g F i c h t e ' s analysis of
reason on the m o d e l of Kant's p r a c t i c a l reason
(reason as
serving its own interest), H a b e r m a s claims to free
rational
criticism from the limitations of circularity inherent in pragmatism and h e r m e n e u t i c s .
Rational criticism based on
the exposure of the socially repressed leaves reason open to itself: an inherently e m a n c i p a t o r y activity that combines theoretical and historical understanding for the purposes of rational
reflection.
The second contemporary thrust develops the of the basic rational functions through psychological m e t h o d s .
understanding
experimental
The main work here have been
of cognitive achievement viewed a g a i n s t
studies
standards
extrapolated from formal logic, the m a t h e m a t i c a l theory of probability and the developmental categories of Piaget. Experimental studies of the use of logical
operations
(Revlin and M a y e r , 1978) and of the p r o b a b i l i s t i c basis for empirical judgment
(Nisbett and R o s s , 1980) have pointed
the context sensitivity of these m o s t fundamental processes. children
to
rational
Recent re-evaluations of Piaget's work with
(Carey, 1980) reinforce this approach, pointing
to
the failure of children at P i a g e t i a n tasks as a function of contingencies of experimental design rather than to the unavailability of fundamental c a t e g o r i e s of
rational
376
processing.
Such claims give clear experimental support to
the wealth of social psychological studies that indicate the context sensitivity of cognitive behavior, including making judgments ranging from the observational to the ethical, as well as reinforcing the general perspective found within the political or sociological analysis of epistemology that questions the relevance of a simple formalist account of rational functioning. The works just cited are all attempts to synthesize a decade or more of experimental outcomes that show the divergence of reasoning practices from logical norms.
What
they share is a movement away from Piagetian-like assumptions that claim a basic difference in the fundamental logical apparatus and toward a focus on the encoding of information, where this encoding already carries within it certain inferential potential.
This common focus can be
seen in the "judgmental heuristics" within inductive contexts (Nisbett and Ross, Chapter 2), in the analysis of available experimental evidence on syllogistic reasoning offered by Revlin and Mayer
(Introduction), and in synthesis
of recent research in the cognitive development of children by Carey.
Thus, deviations from logical norms are seen in
terms of the particulars of the labeling of information as a function of prior semantic, or even more substantive, attitudes toward the categories applied to the information encoded.
These analyses, in their attempt to accommodate
available research, strongly reinforce the fundamental hermeneutic position that sees the understanding of rational functioning as the uncovering of internal of biasing "interests" 12).
(textual) evidence
(Habermas, especially chapters 11 and
The question then is: To what extent do these new
insights qualify our attempt to define a theory of argument that purports to establish norms for the correct evaluation of claims? The issue is most telling given the fundamental view of the informal logic movement that denies the adequacy of
377 f o r m a l or m a t h e m a t i c a l of
argument.
raised
An obvious
within
respectable
considerations
the d o m a i n of
violated
these norms general
inductive
by a c t u a l
enough
to b e s p e a k
short
run.
and
representative
practical
heuristics,
class
within which
it is e n c o d e d
taken
as a d e q u a t e
statistical
to be good
to the task to m a k e
heuristics, however, of
efficacy,
and
that
face of
is u n l i k e l y
to be r e p r e s e n t a t i v e .
to the
information
at hand
the
information
possible
information,
adequate
in i t s e l f , the
larger
class within
representative probability, to w h i c h
it
Although
deductive
error
issue
bias
the is
time
These principle small
This applies
both
heuristic)
a small
s a m p l e of
that, even
is r e l e v a n t
to
the if
the
(the
the e l e m e n t
is d i s c u s s e d
it has clear as w e l l :
explanation,
the
sampled,
f r a c t i o n of
element
illicit
the
in
all
class
the c o n t e x t
for
the m o s t
conversion
In both of
is that
that
within
relevance
increasingly
literature,
by the b e l i e f
a prototypical
that
the
from a
likelihood
only a s m a l l
in
evidence
the b a s i c
is c a t e g o r i z e d
since
or c o n d i t i o n a l s .
psychological motivated
it
are
assigned.
this
logic,
plausible
which
represents is
to the
information
heuristic)
inductive
statements
and
is just
for
that
for
real
(the a v a i l a b i l i t y
at hand
to be
readily
urgency.
a selection
the
evidentiary
B o t h of
sample
since
seem
views
virtue when making
fly in the
in
at l e a s t
available
judgments more
a
availability
evidence
at h a n d .
in m a t t e r s of
sampling:
the
to s t a n d a r d s of
is taken
decisions, especially
which
theory
are, roughly,
adequacy: Evidence
accessible, a presumptive
for
is
who substitute
These heuristics, dubbed
conjoin
issue
norms
is a v a i l a b l e
this
reasoners
for
of p r a g m a t i c h e u r i s t i c s
samples according
heuristics
logic,
theory
The n o r m s of
a small n u m b e r
the
inductive
of a c e n t r a l
but c o m p l e x n o r m a t i v e
t h e o r y of p r o b a b i l i t y . regularly
example
as a b a s i s
these
common
in
of the c l a s s
to w h i c h
common
universal
cases, a the
the c o n v e r s i o n
the s u b j e c t of
of
of
is
the s e n t e n c e it
is
is
assigned,
378 whence the plausibility of the conversion. whether
implausible
This
in itself or not, follows the same
pattern of accepting available evidence as the The error here fundamental
assignment,
is not one of misunderstanding
logical operations characterized
connective, but rather
is epistemological
standard. the
by the
in nature.
The explanation that even the most elementary reflect epistemological errors in "encoding
errors
issues, what Revlin et al. call
information,"
lends strong support
the depth and saliency of the perspective that places
for the
norms of rationality within the community that defines semantic or pragmatic aspects of the information thus removing
the analysis of argument
formal logic basis.
from an
But although reinforcing
large
situation,
objectivistic the
position
of the informal logicians and especially those committed critical thinking
in the "strong sense"
such a perspective
raises crucial
to
(Paul, 1982, 1985),
issues.
For
if we
question the adequacy of critical theory to the task of rational reflection, reason "transparent arises, especially
if we question the availability to itself," a problem of great
for educators.
For without
of
substance
the
imprimatur of a normative theory that is both acceptable relevant
to the argument
issues at stake, how are we to
distinguish between the rational critique of argument
and
the interests of those in whom the responsibility
the
teaching of argument A common response
and
for
analysis is placed? in North America
is to rely on the
Deweyian notion of the community of inquiry, or
some
Socratic notion of open criticism based on the
self-effacing
model of the teacher whose only passion
rational
passion. inherent
is the
But both of these models fly in the face of the inequality of the m e m b e r s of the
community and the clear and divergent
university
interests
students and professors bring to the classroom. there are underlying affiliation
issues of class and
that Further,
political
that commonly affect the university, and
render
379 the student, through his fundamental vulnerability, liable to the substantive attitudes of the professor under the guise of the objective evaluation of claims: claims that, as all evidence now points, cannot be distinguished from the semantic and pragmatic context within which they are housed.
380 REFERENCES Carey, Susan (1985) "Are Children Fundamentally Different Kinds of Thinkers and Learners Than Adults?" in Segal et al.
(1985).
Habermas, Jürgen (1971) Knowledge of Human Interests, Boston:
Beacon Press, translated by Jeremy J.
Shapiro. Nisbett, Richard, and Ross, Lee (1980 Human Inference: strategies and shortcomings of social judgment, Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall Inc. Paul, Richard
(1982) "Teaching Critical Thinking in the
Strong Sense," in Informal Logic Newsletter, IV, 2. (1985) "Background Logic, Critical Thinking, and Irrational Language Games," in Informal Logic, VII, 1. Peters, R. S. (1980) Moral Development and Moral Education, London: George Allen & Unwin Ltd. Revlin, Russel, and Mayer, Richard E. (1978) Human Reasoning, Washington, D.C.: V. H. Winston and Sons. Segal, Judith W., Chipman, Susan F., and Glaser, Robert (1985) Thinking and Learning Skills, Volume 1, Hillsdale, N.J.: Publishers.
Lawrence Erlbaum Associates,
43 The Self-Corrective Process of Learning William E. Murnion
Since
the a t t e m p t
an a x i o m a t i c paradoxes
rather But
appeal
than
is w o r t h
of a h e u r i s t i c
it r e a l i s t i c a l l y ,
r e g r e s s or
exploring whether approach
logic to e n d o w
extrinsic
justification
system.
This
of
it m a y g a i n logic
dialectic -- between questions between analysis
to process.
to r e a s o n i n g
is
product. itself
independent
I shall
and answers,
of
and synthesis,
argue,
between between
that
process, for to a
in a
intuition induction
of r e a s o n i n g a s e l f - c o r r e c t i v e
an
any
from reductive analysis lies,
can
the l e a r n i n g
in r e a s o n i n g
it w i t h a l e g i t i m a c y
implicit
deduction -- which makes
looking
to
reasoning
as a d y n a m i c and c o r r i g i b l e
the a d v a n t a g e
implicit
inference,
infinite
by r e d u c t i o n
ideal i s t i c a l l y , as a s t a t i c a n d d e f i n i t i v e
it a l s o has
formal
it
to an
formally,
i n f o r m a l l y , by a c o n s t r u c t i o n of
immediate
it takes
reasoning
leads only
and dilemmas,
be g r o u n d e d The
system,
to g r o u n d
and and
process
of
learning. First,
there
questions locating
is a d i a l e c t i c
and answers. the b a s i c
in the g e n e s i s
As o p p o s e d
framework
of k n o w l e d g e
to the K a n t i a n a p p r o a c h
of k n o w l e d g e
in sets of
a n s w e r s - - forms, c a t e g o r i e s ,
and
Aristotle
a p p r o a c h of d e t e r m i n i n g
took an a l t e r n a t i v e
a n s w e r s w e can give by r e f e r e n c e ask
(1967:
12-14).
he s a i d w a s at specific
of
can
by s h o w i n g h o w the w o n d e r
( M e t a p h y s i cs,
into a s t r u c t u r e of q u e s t i o n s Since
how
the k i n d s
to the kinds of q u e s t i o n s w e
T h i s he d e m o n s t r a t e d
kinds of a n s w e r s .
of
possible
ideals - - L o n e r g a n has s h o w n
the o r i g i n of k n o w l e d g e
can be a r t i c u l a t e d
between
t h e r e are
four
I (A) 9 8 2 b
12)
to w h i c h
there
are
k i n d s of
questions
382 w e c a n a s k , he c l a i m e d , (Posterior Analytics T o get learn
t h e r e are
to k n o w a fact w e ask w h e t h e r
the c a u s e , w e ask w h y χ h a p p e n s to d i s c o v e r
really
to g r a s p
is
if w e w a n t
Aristotle concluded, they g i v e us
the s o l u t i o n s
to y.
to y, w e a l s o w a n t
the m e a n i n g of
questions
to k n o w w h a t
χ really
exists
is h a p p e n i n g
χ
if it e x i s t s .
χ from d i s c e r n i n g w h y χ a c t s hypothesize
about
immediately,
inquiry
of χ
that
inference
each
There
it.
Here
it,
comes
unjustifiable
into p l a y .
the
definition,
term are complementary. justifiable
For w e h a v e
to y a n d w h e t h e r χ A n d we gather
are cause
if χ is
doing
the n a t u r e
of
just as w e its
nature.
emerging product
there
to a n s w e r s
is a l o g i c of is not
of, inquiry
and
inference
intuition in the
immediate apprehension
that P e i r c e
(1965:
to
and sense
strong
by
s e n s e of
can a l s o m e a n
of w h a t
can g i v e
in the s t r o n g
inference
in the w e a k
intuition
or
the m e a n i n g
the d i a l e c t i c b e t w e e n intuition
questions.
immediate
the w o r d s only an a n s w e r Though
For
of
to k n o w
justified knowledge are contraries
intuition and
doing
immediate
d a t a a n d , m e d i a t e l y , of
immediate apprehension
s e n s e of m e d i a t e l y
is
is if w e
is m o r e ,
it d o e s ,
and
is if w e w o n d e r
is the p r o b l e m of d i s c o v e r i n g is w h e r e
other,
reveals.
from questions
is to be k n o w n b e f o r e h a v i n g indicate
What
is a g r a d u a l l y
to a l o g i c of a n s w e r s ,
the p a s s a g e
automatic.
the w a y
into e m p i r i c a l
the n a t u r e of w h a t
T h u s prior But
questions:
is d o i n g
the e f f e c t s of χ f r o m a g r a s p of
the k n o w l e d g e
χ
to k n o w w h e t h e r
to k n o w w h a t χ
each other.
into
to t h e s e
If w e w a n t
its e x i s t e n c e .
to a n s w e r w h e t h e r
we
consists,
of fact a n d e x i s t e n c e a n d the m e d i a t e q u e s t i o n s
something before asking
to
time,
do w e u n d e r s t a n d w h a t χ
and nature also complement
Hence,
Knowledge
to k n o w w h y χ
it e x i s t s at a l l , a n d w e h a v e
to g r a s p
the same
fact a n d of c a u s e c o m p l e m e n t
Likewise, we want
whether
to y, a n d
problems.
if w e k n o w w h y χ is h a p p e n i n g
to y.
At
these a n s w e r s
those of e x i s t e n c e a n d of n a t u r e .
is h a p p e n i n g
only
χ happens
its ex i s tence a n d a l s o w h a t
to our
give
34).
its n a t u r e .
in g e t t i n g
C l e a r l y , q u e s t i o n s of as do
kinds of a n s w e r s w e c a n
II, 1 - 2 , 8 9 b 2 1 - 9 0 a
m u s t ask j_f χ e x i s t s
χ
four
either
the k i n d of §173)
and
of
383 Lonergan
(1957)
have
spoken
evident
in t h e p a t t e r n
include
the
assertion as
an
k i n d of
-- one
assertion would
informal
only
of
an
be
as
an
empirical
for w h i c h
enthymeme,
justifiability
of
of
insight data.
inference
irrational
without
in a
an
meaning can
rational
explicit,
Without
remain
the
inference
become
upon questioning. would
And
implicit
the g r o u n d s
insight
into
initially
inference
the
inarticulate, while insight
to
supply
an
it
with
mean ing.
The
best
inference unlikely Plato The
is
to be
spot,
has
the
Socrates
dilemma which
seemed
to b e
already we
illustration
did
not
Socrates' all
but
1ocus
class i cus
try
boy, who
instructed
--
showed
apprehension
of
of
how
four
to
discover
find
size
the
a root
whose
root
of
the
this
a
to
of
of
of
learning
into
we
it, or
not
nor
learning gained had
to k n o w
the
By
process
of
for
the
at
by
our
that
ever
come
explanation
else
it.
offered was
knowledge
the
for
that
four
the
it
until
boy
he
original
boy's
the
had
of
been
square
of
to
squares,
drew
for
square.
the
For
problem
the boy
size
is o b v i o u s l y
discovery
the
of a
is o b v i o u s l y
and half it
led
him a series the
that
of
him the
a
square
searching.
a
Since
twice
By
a
been
inference.
posing size
and he
one,
of
is
and
boy by
double
right
the
however,
two),
sixteen,
of w h i c h
anamnesis.
discovered
he
intuition
to
square
shows
square
in w h i c h
either
knowledge
proof
shows,
diagonal
square
of
an
anamnesis.
between
the
for
if w e
proof.
only
sketching
the
square root
the
a root
by
closer
the o r i g i n a l for
formal
theorem
of
the
to be
that
inquire
of
and
(82a-86b)
knowledge was
innate
actually
the
root w a s
circumscriptive eight,
proof
to
nevertheless
a
a dialectic
is, o n e w i t h
picture of
could
theorem was
the s o l u t i o n
each with the
of
And
seem
was
impossible, need
that
insight
the n e c e s s i t y
recognize
of
argued,
demonstrated
(that
square
the
Socrates'
function
or
not
sign
first
the M e n o
recollection
theorem without Socrates
Socrates
no
at
in
not
existence.
elimination,
What
the
between
demonstration
to c l a i m
in g e o m e t r y ,
Pythogorean
did
could
response was
slave
is a
and
it a n d
in a p r e v i o u s
this
unnecessary
recollection
might
to d e m o n s t r a t e
provoked
souls
dialectic
in w h a t
something
know
the
found
either
knew
of
of
384 looking
at
square,
even
to h i s
though
generally,
our
solution
for
to
plausible features
until
emergent
an
infer.
notebooks
to
process
a
rational
root
number,
was
of
this
the
the
solution
only
if w e
we
usually
the
the
implicit
(if
hypothetical different insight
A,
about
reason
--
of
of
an
B;
A;
of
:.B).
therefore,
the m e a n i n g
of
In
as w e l l
the
when
(if
and
implicit
for the
a
it.
In
assertion
the go
relevance on
itself
A,
becomes
the m a j o r
then
to and
explicit the
This in
assertion
formulation
premise
of
of
formal
inference
explicates
a pattern
in
assertion empirical
of
the
structure
in a n
the
B).
the
implicit
as
articulated,
for
do w e
reason
argument,
becomes
thought
evidence
the
just
can m a k e
evidence
inference,
the
argument we
for
challenged
the
we
immediate
grounds
only
the
of
through
becomes
reason and
between in
reason
it,
the
justification.
For
have
pattern
Kepler's
empirical
insight
the
are
statement
premise the
add
informal
The
argument,
into
an
know we
reason
in
then
elements
in
the
consequences
occurred
Therefore,
vary
any
becomes
discovery
1-16).
assertion
argument
paradigmatic
the
in a
analyzed
rational
of
for
Hanson
hypothetical
of
the m i n o r
and
the
The
insight
is
implication
condition
This
of M a r s
it.
the
With
and
solution
there
the
becomes
the
in
must
into
are
problem.
intuitions
are q u e s t i o n e d
inference.
of
Peirce,
for
insight
specifications manifest
we
problem
model
the
be
within
formal
to
can
distinguish
structure,
an
(1967:
discourse,
adequacy
the
orbit
there
which
gain
presuppositions
77-85).
the
a plausible
problem.
from
the
of
simple
everyday
we
can
solution
becomes
whose
in
we
data
to a p r o b l e m
the
assertion
an
the
assertion
rational
the
of
of
argued,
the
for
the
justification
has
when
from
how Kepler's
for
in
the
that
solution
recognition
tip
(1958:
--
the
analyze
is a
problems,
rational
every
by
solution
character
Lonergan
and
see
determinate
criteria
data
show
draw
must
the
the
apprehensions
only
no
could
from which
assertion
mathematical
The
we
Taking
elliptical a
The
insight
from
for
to
to b e m e t
model
concomitant
such
boy
to d i s c o v e r
a model
it.
requirements
can
the
it h a d
imaginations
lineaments
basis
figure,
problem.
More use
the
a
based data.
the upon This
385 form any
is
flexible
type
of
The
the
for
the
lends
units
and yet
implication
inference
content
for
propositions
demonstrates Hence,
enough
form
of to
so
to s t a n d
simple
the
insight, while
of
learning
does
a dialectic
between
analysis
and
solution
to a p r o b l e m
a
against
(1971:
reflective
hypothesis prepared fit
the
defend
the
hypothesis
as R a w l s
to
its
and Goodman
fit w i t h i n the
an
of
the
an
exception
facts
equilibrium,
supplies
and
(1983:
65-68)
theory
field
the
and
--
To
the
from an
sure
by we
be to
For just
are
reach
f o r m of
as
it
point
assertion,
through
its p r e s u p p o s i t i o n s
-- and
--
from
the
presuppositions
as
conditions,
the
or
nonfulfillment about
dialectic
from a simple the of
logical the
the
demands
alternatives As
the m a j o r
a grasp
the n e c e s s a r y
possibility
representation
of
its
argument
and
gained
nature
object.
function the
an of
reason
positing enunciated
a
synthesis
fulfillment
or a
But or in
and
negative
the
and
of
capable
insight has
it h a s
an
of
in s y n t h e s i s the
the
of
the
a logical
logical
fulfillment
the a n t e c e d e n t
a
import
of
articulating
for
reveals
it h a s
admitting
origin
into
both
the
insight
inference
existential
the
conditions
The minor
negating
form
be a b i c o n d i t i o n a l ,
from an
what
the
form
analysis
In a n a l y s i s
in a p r o t o t y p e
to a
sufficient
nature.
function.
of
the a r g u m e n t
premise must
representing of
to a p o s i t i v e
elaboration
t e r m of
of an o b j e c t
existential
an of
the
synthesis, of
through
be
assertion.
hypothetical
elements.
to of
the
to
conditions,
must
inference must
it,
the
reach
are
and against of
until,
prepared
the
the
the
unless we
it,
we
test
argued, we
fact.
is
asserting have
have
unless we
the
cannot
consequences
theory
rule.
therefore,
analysis
its
in
itself
simply
to a c c o m m o d a t e
in a to
We
however,
for
This
the
inference
reasons
conclusion
or
premises.
insight
insight;
conventional
theory
rest
between
by
between
it as
dialectic
in t h e
since
synthesis.
presuppositions
equilibrium revise
inference
is s u g g e s t e d
20)
must
reflective
number
inference
terminate,
insight
discovered
and
not
between
hypothesis
any
inference.
dialectic
whatever
every
conclusion
interaction have
for
and
function
about
an of
the
existential in t h e
the m a j o r
for
concrete the
of
386 occurrence of the object.
A n d the rational assertion, w h i c h is at
the origin of analysis and the term of synthesis, must be at outset of
the
inference a logical disjunction between the affirmation
and the negation of a hypothetical
solution to a problem and at
the
point of reflective equilibrium the determination of whichever alternative
is actually w a r r a n t e d by the conjunction between
theory
and fact. But the fact that the equilibrium to be a c h i e v e d by the dialectic between analysis and synthesis
is between fact and theory
suggests that the form of inference has two functions, and deduction, also induction
in dialectical
relationship to each other.
inference serves to generate and explicate
a hypothesis suggested by factual data, while serves to test and apply the hypothesis to the framework of theory.
For
induction performs
Therefore, while
supply the content of deduction,
to dispense with nevertheless
the
traditional
is necessary physical
induction does
indeed
it has a logical validity of
own, one which does not, however, preempt to test and ground hypotheses.
it
to the facts and reduce it
function of arriving at a genuine
explanation of the facts.
In
the m e a n i n g of
in deduction
function of "saving the appearances," but deduction for the complementary
induction
its
the function of deduction
And deduction, without being able
induction for the genesis of hypotheses, has
the potentiality
course of determining
for increasing knowledge
the empirical
in the
objectivity and the
theoretical
significance of hypotheses. Interpreting
induction and deduction as complementary
of the dialectic between analysis and synthesis
functions
in the form of
inference does not just have the advantage of providing an explanation for the process of achieving reflective
equilibrium
between fact and theory
It also avoids
the endemic dilemmas
in any rational assertion.
that arise for both procedures as well as for
knowledge as a w h o l e w h e n they are given an a priori in terms of their relative approximation system.
interpretation
to the demands of a formal
In that case, induction must be admitted to be necessary
if deduction
is to have any determinate content, but
it is
concomitantly denigrated for being without any pretension to formal
387
validity. to which
And deduction must be recognized for the formal
it at least aspires but condemned for depending upon the
discredited procedure of induction for
its content.
that we are faced w i t h the prospect of either using procedures without any formal
The result
of the procedures does not The complementary
these interpretation
lead.
functions of induction and deduction
dialectic between analysis and synthesis, the dialectic analysis and synthesis
in the form of
inference and intuition
inference, the
in the genesis of
in the
between
interaction
rational
assertion, the anticipation of the shape of answers framework of questioning:
is
justification or else of not
reasoning at all -- an impasse to w h i c h a heuristic
between
validity
in the
these are factors a heuristic
interpretation of reasoning suggests are elements corrective process of learning.
Only what w e
in a self-
inquire
into can we
understand, only what we understand can we explain, only what we explain can we
integrate w i t h fact and theory, and only what we
integrate w i t h fact and theory can we claim to know. w i t h the conjunction of the elements of reasoning coordinated process, therefore, does
into a
it seem to be possible for
reasoning to become, occasionally and asymptotically, rational
W i t h and only
true belief entitled to be called
knowledge.
the kind of
388 References
Goodman, Ν.
(1983).
Fact, Fiction, and Forecast.
4th ed.
Harvard. Hanson, N. R.
(1958).
Patterns of Discovery: An Inquiry
Conceptual Foundations of Science. Lonergan, B.
(1957).
into the
Cambridge.
Insight: A Study of Human
Understanding.
Longmans, Green. Lonergan, B.
(1967).
Burrell, ed. Lonergan, B.
(1967).
Collect ion. Peirce, C. S.
(1965).
Verbum: Word and
Idea
The form of
inference.
Rawls, J.
In F. E. Crowe, ed.
Herder and Herder. Pragmatism and Pragmaticism.
Hartshorne and Paul Weiss, eds. 5.
in Aquinas. D.
Notre Dame.
In Charles
Collected Papers, Vol.
Belknap Press of Harvard.
(1971).
A Theory of Justice.
Belknap Press of Harvard.
44 The Implicit Teleology of Human Communication and Experience Michael Astroh
The paper is meant to contribute to a philosophical foundation of a general and uniform account of argumentation and its cultural preconditions.
It will consist of two parts.
The first
section will introduce a pragmatic conception of teleology.
The
second will elaborate this notion to the extent that it can be used
for a systematic account of different forms of argumenta-
tion. I. Neither in human experience nor in communication by means of culturally determined
signs, reference can be conceived
of as
being independent of any concern about what is referred to.
The
idea of relating to something where its determination does
not
matter
in
any
way
is
inconsistent.
For
if
it is
strictly
irrelevant what is referred to then it is equally pointless refer.
to
The question is of how the importance of things for those
who make experiences with and achieve communication about
them
can be understood as an intrinsic feature of the various forms in which things are accessible. In
contrast
with
all
other
ways of
relating
to
them,
culturally acquired, linguistic communication is unique in that it is the one which not only allows to establish and share common relations with things, but moreover makes it possible to achieve a common understanding of those forms of reference. Its methodological primacy, however, genetic priority of experience.
is contravened
by a
For it is undeniable that any
transmission of signs is acquired through a specific organisation of human experience.
390 On the one hand, a uniform presentation of various forms of reference is methodologically bound to set out from an account of those features that any communicative unit must have in order to be referential and to conceive in those terms all other forms of acquaintance with things· Thus, even experience will have to be considered as an activity of semiotic form which may be said to differ from communication only insofar as it precedes genetically- Once a semiotic conception of the form in which experience is referential has been given, then, on the other hand, it is required to reconstruct communication as a specific organisation thereof. First however, it has to be determined what intrinsic features a sign must have in order to be a referential unit that may occur on its own. Reference is not a relationship, in the simplest case, between two objects one of which is standing in for the other. A sign must not be identified with the object whose marking results in the production of a communicative unit. For instance, a carved piece of wood might resemble a duck, and it could serve to picture what an animal of this kind is like, but it may not be confused with the resulting representation. In other circumstances the same object might be used as a decoy. Notwithstanding that similarities between objects can pertain to the formation of signs, reference is an intrinsic semiotic feature. It is the sign that tells what it refers to; and if it does not specify any particular reference then there is no sign. The way in which a unit of communication determines what its reference is will be called its sense. Now, that a sign of this kind is referring to something cannot simply be conceived as given state of affairs. Any participant in a discussion about human communication has to admit that, just as experience, it is a kind of activity. In the present context this is to say that both of them are put into effect as a successive production of referential units. Each of these has to count as an independent one in that it has reference on its own. What, for instance, a sentential or pictorial representation and, likewise, an experience is referring to has to be established in finitely many steps; otherwise it is not determined. But in spite of the fact that each semiotic production has to count as a separate unit of communication or experience, none of
391 them
can occur
as entirely
isolated
following achievement of this kind.
from
any
preceding
or
If a semiotic production was
only telling what it refers to but did not convey the importance of its reference in relation to some other unit of representation then it would be altogether irrelevant what it is referring to; and thus there would be no sign at all. In the present analysis nothing but a successive production of representations
can be at issue.
Therefore, a unit actually
achieved cannot impart its relevance in relation to other units which had been or will be formed, unless it conveys the importance of their realisation with respect to its own Thus,
if a given
representation
is relevant
production.
with
regard
to
succeeding ones it has to convey that they ought to be achieved. Conversely, if it is relevant in view of preceding ones it will have been formed in accordance or contrast with their tions.
This normative
condition on which any
direc-
representation
depends shall be called the mode in which it has reference. According to these observations communication and experience have to be understood
in terms of ordered semiotic
transitions.
At each stage in the performance of these human activities an end is partially or entirely established, achieved or missed. occur as an intention, particularly in communication.
It may
Experien-
ces, on the other hand, are often produced or undergone without being
intended.
But in both cases orientation is an intrinsic
feature. In a conscious pursuit of an aim things occur to be irrelevant in the sense that they are scarcely noticed.
This,
however,
cannot serve as a counterexample against the normative aspect of any form of representation. particular attention
What does not matter insofar as no
is paid
thereto does matter
in that it
conforms to the ends pursued. The number of semiotic transitions required to achieve a given end must, again, be finite. whether
Otherwise, a criterion
it has not been missed
is not available.
case the prescribed developement is not sufficiently
to decide
But in this specified.
Conversely, the number of transitions that are required in order to establish an end also has to be finite.
Otherwise it remains
undetermined which step shall count as the first of its realisation.
392 Nevertheless, it is compatible with this normative account of human experience and communication that its form does not exclude its infinite
continuation.
It may be regarded as an endless
activity insofar as its performance repeats itself. For this reason it is crucial to realize that a semiotic unit produced in accordance or contrast with a prescribed developement is modally determined not just with respect to its predecessors. It too has to have a genuine normative aspect to the effect that it calls for the establishment of a new orientation. This does not contradict the finite character of semiotic
transitions
though
it gives
question: how come any particular place?
end
rise
prescribed
to the
following
is set up in the
first
On the one hand, things are not accessible unless one
performs certain acts allowing for their adequate and communicative representation.
experiential
For only under this condition
may they turn out to be of one kind rather than another.
But, on
the other hand, any particular orientation cannot be established unless they have done so.
It is not possible to say what things
are like independent of any form in which they are referred to and, thus, irrespective of any interest
in them.
However,
it
would be pointless to comment on representations and their ends unless the objects at issue have presented themselves not to be mere effects of the ways in which they become accessible.
In a
world where everything would happen to be just as it should, it could not matter to exist. Accordingly, tions
have
representations prescribing particular orienta-
to occur
establishment referential
under
the
following
has to be preceded
units contrasting
remained beyond
condition:
their
by the production of other
with pursuits
that would
have
any concern had they not been frustrated
such
that reactions had to be called for. The intrinsic aspects any semiotic unit must possess in order to have reference were set apart, above, under entirely pragmatic auspices.
Both sense and mode of referentially
signs were explained
in such a way
self-sufficient
that no participant
in a
discussion about communication could deny their being essential and distinct features.
Whereas, the one accounts for the
fact
that any representational unit is specific in content, the other answers to the prerequisite of its functional determination.
393 By intention, only those essential features of communicative units were taken into consideration that do not exclusively characterise this particular form of reference.
The reasons for
which sense and mode count as indispensable features equally had pertain
to the case of non-communicative reference.
Any shift
from one representation to another, either of the same or of a different
type, consists
in a semiotic
transition
relates to the normative order in which it occurs. perspective
and
thus
With
this
the question of how and for what purpose one is
participating in a cultural form of life translates itself into the
task
of
explaining,
in terms of
human activity
and
its
representation, the modal order in which a culture is generated and tries to reproduce itself. In this short article it is not possible to carry out the most essential genetic reconstruction, namely, that of the modal form in which higher communicative types of reference are necessarily conditioned by elementary experiential representations. a
further
elaboration
of
the concept
of
a mode
Instead,
in which a
semiotic unit has reference might provide some useful hints as to how the required explanations will have to proceed. II. Due
to its genetic primacy, experience must
simplest form of semiotic production. sufficient
count as the
Its referentially
units will be called situations.
Being basic units
they cannot be syntactically complex representations. respect
they
resemble
elementary
pictures
self-
and
In this
indications.
These, however, have situations as their reference, whereas the latter represent things. Primarily, the mode in which situations do so has to be an implicit determination.
If it is given separately, then they
have to be preceded by a unit of a more elaborate type which by its reference
specifies
the mode
of a following
one.
For
example, the situation that the audience in a concert hall has become silent might be said to determine explicitly the mode of the
situation
that
the
first note
is played.
For
now,
in
contrast with a rehearsal, all situations in which the music is presented have to follow.
But then, of course, the mode either
of the situation that the listeners start to concentrate or of
394
one of its predecessors must be implicit. The same argument applies to the explicit modal determination of communicative units. The formation of an assertion like "the concert has started" is logically prior to saying that it is the case that it did. The mode of a unit prescribing a transition to particular successors is a proper mode, whereas the normative aspect of the latter ones will be called an inverse mode. If in this case it is required to implement another proper orientation then a selective mode is in force. In order to account for the possibility that situations do not differ in their content but merely with respect to their implicit modal determination, it is necessary to provide a semiotic conception of the way in which things are made and happen to appear. Then, it can be understood in terms of variations in appearances to what an implicit selection of a particular orientation amounts. On the level of communication the same considerations will help, for instance, to explain the role of linguistic unambiguity achieved by means of stress and intonation. If a proper transition to an immediately succeeding unit is at issue, a direct mode is in force; in all other cases it is indirect or instrumental. For example, that one is walking in the street presents itself in an instrumental mode if the end is to achieve the situation that one has reached the stop in order to take the bus. In ,an argumentation an initial premiss will be put forward in an instrumental mode if other premisses shall be given before a conclusion is to be drawn. In cases where the ordered semiotic developement concerns just sense and reference of the units involved, the mode is objective; if, additionally, the semiotic production is related to those that have to achieve it, the mode is communicative. Speech acts exemplify a modal determination of this kind. None of the distinctions that have been introduced so far concern transitions between different forms of reference, especially between experience and communication. If a developement remains within the same form of representation, the corresponding mode is a material one. In this case the progression has to lead either to an alternative unit, then the mode will be external, or a further differentiation of a given unit is
395 prompted, and
the mode
is internal.
In a transition of the
former kind either the same is referred to in a different sense or a converse shift has to take place.
In a transition of the
latter kind at least three forms of internal developement have to be taken into account:
for instance, the situation that someone
is walking may be extended
by one about something else.
The
result could be that he is walking by the side of a river.
In
addition the situation may be deepened; that is to say the sense in which something is referred to can be made more specific on its own. river.
For example, he
is walking slowly by the side of a
On top of that the
further
completed.
obtained:
Thus,
sense of a representation the
following
situation
may be
could
be
as someone walking slowly by the side of a river he is
watching the birds.
The sentences which have been used in order
to refer to situations of this kind will serve as communicative examples of internal developement. If, on the other hand, a shift from one form of reference to another is prescribed, then the mode is formal.
With respect to
a direct passage of this kind it is required to produce a unit referring to the preceding one, or the converse transition has to be achieved. the units
A formal progression will not be obtained
involved have the
same content.
unless
In the case of a
pictorial representation this is guaranteed by the similarities between the object used for the depiction--it might be called the semiotic substratum--and situation.
In
the
coherence of sense
the object referred to by the depicted
case
of
linguistic
is obtained
noticed though that despite
representation
by convention.
this
It should
be
of their accordance in content the
referring and the unit referred to differ in sense. In the present context it is not possible to give an account of the modal structure of experience in which is given rise to communicative
forms of representation.
carved piece of wood
But the example of a
serving both pictorial
and
instrumental
purposes might indicate that the organisation of an exchange of signs
is not understood
adequately
if it
is meant
to be
an
instrumental kind of interaction in which the used objects happen to be semiotic substrata. communication.
One can play with words without having
Once it is known what distinguishes this form of
interaction from other types of social order, games will allow to
396 explain the sense in which a given sign has reference. cannot serve to understand
But they
in what way the normative orders at
issue here, experience and communication, are different. A proper formal mode of the simplest kind which is both direct and objective initiates a transition from a lower form
of reference.
A
repertoire
of
linguistic communication is established explicative mode.
to a higher
signs as it is used in accordance with
Once it has been acquired
in
this
the corresponding
transition from an experiential situation to its description has to be evaluated
as adequate or inadequate with regard to the
applied repertoire. The converse formal mode prescribes to produce the situation which
is referred
to initially.
The mode
involved
here
is
assertoric or argumentative in the most narrow sense; and with regard
to the extent
to which an according transition is rea-
lised, assertions will count as true or false. In this way a purely semiotic account of orientation
in and
between human experience and communication is put forward. implicit teleology turned out to be of entirely regional
Its
scope.
It is determined by those existing in cultural forms of life.
If
there is any global end to be pursued beyond the ones selected as finite
orientations,
destination. leads.
then
still
it
cannot
be
a
personal
For it is impossible to say what it is and where it
45
Argumentation and Dialectical Logic Norbert Gutenberg
It is an old t r a d i t i o n to start by quoting
Aristotle:
"Rhetoric is the correspondential counterpart ( pfvtc < of d i a l e c t i c "
ο
)
(1980: 7). R h e t o r i c "aims at modes of convince-
ment", "convincement is a sort of p r o o f "
fib.: 9),
"proofs"
or "modes of c o n c l u s i o n " are "the subject m a t t e r of d i a l e c t i c " (ib.: 10). Thus interest in rhetoric and a r g u m e n t a t i o n means interest in dialectic. If dialectical logic is a b r a n c h of dialectic this e p i c h e i r e m may legitimate the e x a m i n a t i o n of dialectical logic for the aim of a theory of argumentation. Among the numerous notions of "dialectic" w h i c h are dealt w i t h in a n d outside p h i l o s o p h y the one u s e d in this context is the following: dialectic is "the theory of the general laws of m o v e m e n t a n d development of nature, the human society and t h i n k i n g " (Engels 1973a: 131 f.). Dialectical logic is the "theory of the laws of thinking and its forms" (Fogarasi 1973: 25), Engels distinguishes between "objective" and
"subjective"
dialectic: "Dialectic, the so-called objective one, prevails
in
the whole of nature, and the so-called subjective dialectic, the dialectical thinking is only the reflex of this m o v e m e n t oppositions prevailing everywhere
in
in n a t u r e " (Engels 1973b:
481).
Dialectical logic as a theory of the modes of thinking is consecutively an epistemology
inasmuch as it conceives the forms
of thinking as a "reflection" of objective dialectic; thus a basic thesis is: "The laws of logic are the reflection of the reality in the subjective
objective
consciousness of h u m a n s " (Lenin 1954:
103).
398
"Reflection" is not conceived as a passive process of mental reproduction (like a psychic copy), but as specific "form of movement" with "specific laws" (Fogarasi 1973: 25). Assertions on the
'objective' are at the same time determined by this
'objective' and by the
'reflecting'
The central element of
subject.
'objective dialectic'
is the overall
prevailing movement in oppositions. Thus this movement has to find its correspondence in human thinking and furthermore also in logic. That is why the form of thinking of or
'opposition'
'contradiction'
is the central one for dialectical logic as the
theory of the modes of thinking. The epistemological
self-concept
of dialectical logic implies a specific theory of truth, the basic concept of
'opposition/contradiction'
implies a theory of
genesis and solution of 'oppositions/contradictions'. In any argumentation theory truth is a concept which - no matter whether positively or negatively - serves to define the concept of argumentation. At the same time the concepts of convincing/persuading, consensus, the point of dispute have a central role. These imply the category of opposition/contradiction. So it seems interesting to have a closer look at the above mentioned aspects of dialectical logic. Most theories follow the Aristotelian dualism of of
'apodictical' and
'verum' as a quality of
quality of
'theoretical'
'dialectical truth', and
'verisimile' as a
'practical knowledge'. This dualism leads on the one
side ( = apodictical truth) to a correspondence theory of truth on an axiomatic-deductive basis, on the other side (= dialectical truth) to a consensual theory on a dialogical basis (dialogical = dialectical in the original meaning of the word). The consensual theory leads to an infinite regress which starts with the necessity of finding consensually the conditions for the consensus. The correspondence theory excludes inductive knowledge and seems to end in a kind of consensus with its
'evidence of the axioms'.
This dualism principally opposes everyday-life knowledge and science. But theory and history of science show how the latter stems from the former. This dualism implies that in the realm of "practical action" only the "definition of what is adequate in a given situation" is possible
(Kopperschmidt 1974: 273), but never
general knowledge of the general laws of
'practical action' of the
399 socialised human beings, which is a contradiction in itself, if we do not presuppose that society and history are not subject to objective laws of movement. This concept neglöcts the fact that even axiomatic-deductive truth needs convincing argumentation to be accepted - as history shows. Rhetoric as a 'method of finding social certainty in practical action'
(Kopperschmidt) would drive into another
self-contradiction: either its laws can be obtained axiomatically and by deduction, which would make rhetoric a part of apodictical knowledge and exclude it from the realm of practical action, or it never can define any laws and has to develop also the
'method'
in the given situation, which means that there is no general 'method' at all. Dialectical logic claims to overthrow this dualism. I shall try to show this approximately with a few quotations: "dialectical thinking" means "not to believe that our knowledge is something finished and unchangeable, but investigate how knowledge generates from non-knowledge, how the non-perfect, non-precise knowledge becomes more perfect, more precise knowledge" (Lenin 1975: 96). "Knowledge is always relative, never final, never perfect. (...) That is why it never can be conceived, in any discipline, as accomplished. On the other side the development is never terminated, (has no) principal borders. Any relative knowledge implies an absolute element" (Fogarasi 1973: 374). "Dialectic implies, as Hegel explained, a moment of relativism, of negation, of scepticism, but is not reduced to relativism. (...) It concedes the relativity of all our knowledge, yet not in the sense of a negation of the objective truth, but in the sense of the historical determination of the approximation of our knowledge towards truth" (Lenin 1975: 131 f.). The origin of all knowledge is experience. Dialectical logic tries to show this even for the principles of logic and Aristotle's axioms: "The practice of human beings is impressed and printed into human consciousness as logical forms by billions of times of repetition. Because of this billionfold repetition these forms have the constancy of prejudice and the quality of axioms." So, "for Hegel, too, the action, the practice is^ a logical conclusion, a form of logic" (Lenin 1954: 139).
400 From this stems the concept of theory and science as a d e v e l o p e d form of everyday-life thinking and knowledge. At the same time
this
epistemological concept of logic complements the c r i t e r i a of formal logical adequacy
(as the reflection of the most
general
structures of all reality) by a c r i t e r i o n of the "specific of the specific object"
(Marx 1978: 296), w h i c h reflects
logic
the
special structures of this special part of reality: unity of formal and factual
logic.
From this results that the concept of the u b i q u i t y of r h e t o r i c is v a l i d in science too: scientific knowledge
is c o n s i d e r e d as
h i s t o r i c a l , so are rules and axioms of formal logic. As
historical,
it has to be subject to criticism of ideology to separate
its
relative and historical from its
scientific
'absolute'
elements. A n d
truth has to be made c o n v i n c i n g , has to be e x p l a i n e d to be effective. The realm of
'practical action'
is subject to
scientific
research. Its knowledge can be objectively correct. Truth in the sense of correspondence between theory a n d reality is the goal here, too. Consensus is not the last and only criterion.
Topics
has to be subject to a criticism of ideology not only in a sociology of knowledge point of view, b u t also in the sense of separating its relative and historical from its
'absolute'
elements. The following element of a definition, I p r o p o s e d
for
'convincing', "the convincement of a s p e a k e r / l i s t e n e r exposed to reflection on its possibly p r e j u d i c e d
is to be
content"
(Gutenberg 1 985: 25), is thus b a c k e d by a n e w aspect:
'prejudice'
means in this context the h i s t o r i c a l limitation, the social h i s t o r i c a l relativity of one's
knowledge.
C r i t i c i s m in this view is always immanent to p r o c e s s e s b a s e d on dialectical the realm of
and
logic, whether
argumentation
in science or in
'practical action'. From this follows that an
argumentative a s s e r t i o n is not either but b o t h at the same time.
'Verum' and
'verum' or
'verisimile'
'verisimile
1
can be
dictory to e a c h other, but are qualities of the same At the same time another c r i t e r i o n of
'argument':
a c c e p t a b l e ' , can be derived from the verisimile
contra-
assertion.
'psychosocially
aspect.
401 All a r g u m e n t a t i o n theories I know use, implicitly or explicitly, the concept of definition,
'point of dispute'
- q u a e s t i o . A possible
I suggested, is: "The point of dispute, that is the
p o s s i b i l i t y of not only differing but, above all,
contradictory
opinions, w h i c h is founded in the facts and their
interpretation
and is subjectified in d i s c o u r s e "
(Gutenberg Ί985: 9 1 ) . This
d e f i n i t i o n w o u l d be partly impossible if the d u a l i s m between 'verum'
and
'verisimile' were
A s s e r t i o n s on So the definition
accepted.
'practical action'
can only be
'verisimile'.
'founded in the facts' w o u l d be
senseless.
This part of the definition is not acceptable for a consensual theory of argumentation. In this kind of theory
controversies
can only be conceived as contradictions b e t w e e n opinions. So it seems that contradictions
are not p r o b l e m a t i c at all because
the verisimile concept excludes the investigation of objective truth; it is sufficient to find a consensus on w h i c h of the contradictory assertions is valid. This theory ends in an aporia: if the opponents do not find a c o m m o n general premiss from w h i c h they can conclude, they have two contradictory assertions on w h i c h they cannot even apply the principle of the e x c l u d e d
contradiction.
"It is e x c l u d e d that one and the same p r e d i c a t i o n can be and not applied to one and the same subject in the same
applied relation"
(Aristotle 1978: 89). One of the two assertions should be But because both are
'verisimile'
false.
a p a r a d o x o n is p r o d u c e d . One
cannot decide w h i c h one of the assertions is
'more similar to
truth' nor can it be shown that one of the assertions has b e e n p r o d u c e d in a n o n - r e a s o n a b l e way, because of the infinite of the consensual
Since dialectical logic overthrows the dualism of 'verisimile'
regress
theory. 'verum'
it avoids such p a r a d o x a . The correspondential
of truth,which at the same time stresses the h i s t o r i c a l
and
concept
relativity
of knowledge, conceives contradictory assertions as a possible e x p r e s s i o n of contradictions in reality.So the a r g u m e n t a t i o n process has to investigate just this. Dialectical logic not only backs up the d e f i n i t i o n
'founded in the facts'
for the p o i n t of dispute, but
allows a more complex definition: the p o i n t of dispute is "the division of the uniform into its contradictory e l e m e n t s "
(Fogarasi
1973: 145) and not only on the level of opinions but on the level
402 of the facts. Aristotle explains his wording of the contradictoryprinciple with the remark: "It is excluded that one can think that one and the same thing could be and not be" (Aristotle 1975: 89). The evidence of this judgement explains why the above described paradoxon does not appear while focussing on the discourse of one speaker. The dialogical point of view leads to a dialectical one: the dialectical concept, that we can find objective and relative elements in all knowledge, leads to the question if thesis and antithesis could both be true. This is the application of the dialectical version of the principle of contradiction: "Two contradictory assertions can both be true, if they express the contradictions of reality based on different (historical etc.) relat ions" (Fogarasi 1973: 66). The contradictory theseis of two opponents can be the expressions of two contradictory truths, because each opponent can have a different objective relation to the part of reality in discussion. Therefore the historical limitation of each opinion is to be found. Only this can be understood as ideological criticism - which concept only makes sense if ideology means a false consciousness in relation to an objective reality. At the same time the 'absolute element' is to be elaborated. Again we find here the postulate of unity of formal and factual logic which Marx called "the specific logic of the specific object" (Marx 1978: 296). So the 'division of the uniform in its contradictory elements' on the level of opinions can lead to a division on the level of facts. This corresponds to the function of argumentation in practical action: the solution of the contradiction of opinions must result in the practical solution of the basic practical contradiction. In so far defining the point of dispute always means asking if there is a contradiction in the part of reality in discussion. The historical relation of the speaker/listener with reality can determine if an "argument is
psychosocially comprehensible and
acceptable" (Gutenberg 1985: 93) for a speaker/listener. This relation implies the objective situation of the speaker/listener and influences his convincibility. So even the
'verisimile' is
403 not reduced to psychologistical voluntarism but has an absolute element. Insofar the definition of is preserved: 'verisimile'
'argumentation' by
'verisimile'
'verum' alone is not sufficient, it needs to be for a given speaker/listener and vice versa. A new
definition of what convincing and persuading is can be derived from there. Dialectical logic can be understood as the product of a historical evolution beginning with the Aristotelian dialectic. It seems legitimate to apply here, too, the relation between 'dialectic' y and 'rhetoric' valid at Aristotle's time: "As the ^ t c t t f o y o j follows the
rhetoric is determined by dialectic,
not vice versa" (Hellwig 1973: 45). This contribution claims to be a step in this direction starting from dialectical logic.
404 Reference list Aristoteles (1978). Metaphysik. Schriften zur ersten Philosophie. Obersetzt und herausgegeben von Franz F. Schwarζ. Stuttgart. Aristoteles (1980). Rhetorik. Obersetzt, mit einer Bibliographie, Erläuterungen und einem Nachwort von Franz G. Sieveke. München. Engels, F. (1973a). Herrn Eugen Dührings Umwälzung der Wissenschaft. In MEW, Bd. 20, Berlin (DDR). Engels, F. (1973b). Dialektik der Natur. In MEW, Bd. 20, Berlin (DDR). Fogarasi, B. (1973). Dialektische Logik - mit einer Darstellung erkenntnistheoretischer Grundbegriffe. s'Gravenhage. Gutenberg, N. (1985). Argumentation in the field of rhetorical communication. In R. Cox, M. Sillens, G. Walker, eds., Argument and social practice. Proceedings of the 4th SCA/AFA Conference on Argumentation. Annandale, VA. Hellwig, A. (1973). Untersuchungen zur Theorie der Rhetorik bei Plato und Aristoteles. Göttingen. Kopperschmidt, J. (1974). Kritische Rhetorik. In J. Dyck, Hrsg., Rhetorik in der Schule. Kronberg. Lenin, W.I. (1954). Aus dem philosophischen Nachlaß. Berlin (DDR). Lenin, W.I. (1975). Materialismus und Empiriokritizismus. Berlin (DDR). Marx, K. (1978). Zur Kritik der Hegeischen Rechtsphilosophie. In MEW, Bd. 1, Berlin (DDR). (All citations translated into English by Norbert Gutenberg)
Formal Perspectives
46 Logical and Non-Logical Foundations of Argumentation Denis Apoth6loz
1. Introduction This communication is about argumentation and reasoning in nonspecialized oral discourse, i.e. in everyday - as opposed to scientific - discourse. From the point of view of reasoning, and probably also from that of argumentation, there are certainly important differences among the many types of discourse expressed in natural language (Grize, ed. 1984). Still, it seems to me that non-specialized discourse presents, by and large, an unusually broad range of patterns. There are, I think, several reasons for this: - Non-specialized discourse is the constant echo of a multitude of other discourses, some of which are indeed elaborated within a certain field of specialization (legal, economic, medical, psychological and technical discourse, etc.). All sorts of reasoning and argumentation schemas are to be found in it, some of which are taken over as is or with only slight modification. - It is, in its very unfolding, constantly influenced by the situation as well as by the identity and the reactions of the audience - whence the presence of certain argumentative forms referring directly to these aspects, which, strictly speaking, are extradiscursive . - As oral spontaneous discourse, it is essentially improvised,
408
being barely planned or planned as it occurs, and therefore in perpetual coming-to-be. The train of thought that it restores is, at least in part, formulated by degrees as it is being put into discourse. This is the cause of various phenomena of self-correction, which can bring the speaker to add nuance to an utterance after having made it, or even to cancel it outright on grounds of being in disagreement with it or of finding a mistake in it. I should like to emphasize a point that is commonplace in itself but certainly essential: non-specialized discourse aims mainly at persuasion, i.e. the transformation of representations of the audiance, not at truth. In other words it has more in common with action than with the activity of knowing. This amounts to saying that its balance sheet is drawn up in terms not of truth and falsehood but of success and failure. Even purely informative discourse often cannot do without the tools of persuasion, at least not altogether . 2. Argumentation and Reasoning The attempt at a scientific understanding of this type of discourse is obviously a highly complex enterprise (some might even say a high-risk enterprise): it aims at an object that is difficult to grasp and to delimit- and that presents, therefore, many obstacles to a systematic and objective approach. Still it is a good idea to equip oneself with some tools, even if they be but very general definitions, posed tentatively but having heuristic value. In this work I shall consider argumentation to be a functional discursive process and reasoning a structural discursive process. In this way I entend to take into account the fact that a reasoning discourse can be endowed with an argumentative function and that an argumentative discourse can have a structure of reasoning. Thus it often happens that the author of a non-specialized discourse, in the very act of arguing, reasons (insofar as he meets the requirement of minimal rationality) and, in the very act of reasoning, argues (insofar as the putting to use of this rationality promotes the
409 attainment of an objective). The terms argumentation and reasoning do not on this view, designate observable things that are necessarily distinct, but rather different ways of viewing objects that, in reality, overlap a great deal. I shall use the expressions argumentative arrangement and reasoning patterns to designate the constructions carried out on the basis of these two points of view. The argumentative arrangement is basically a result of an elaboration which takes place in an interaction and for this reason it is inseparable from the act of enunciation (enonciation). Patterns of reasoning, meanwhile, are grounded in representations that the speaker himself has of objects, facts and events and the way in which they interact ν they refer therefore to all kinds of systems of thought, to all kinds of knowledge, of ideologies, of commonplace topics, and to the modality of representations that Verges (1986) calls "cultural matrixes of interpretation" . Every analysis of discourse assumes, at one time or another, operations of segmentation. For reasons mentioned above (the primacy of persuasive action), I shall base these operations on the analysis of argumentative arrangement. As a second step only, the nature of patterns of reasoning that sustain argumentative arrangement will be examined. I shall consider an argument to be any segment of discourse the function or effect of which is to argue in favor of another segment of the same discourse. This definition would be tautological were I not to add the following clarification. The expression "argue in favor of" here subsumes two different functions, which incidentally are not necessarily exclusive: the one that consists of adding plausibility ("plausibilizing" function), i.e. in increasing the verisimilitude of what is said, as in (1); and the one that consists of explanation or justification (explanatory function) , as in (2) , making use, for example, of reasoning of a causal nature. The relation established between these two segments can be considered epistemic in the case of the plausibilizing function and ontic in the
410
explanatory function (Borel, 1984). We shall have occasion to see that specific patterns of reasoning correspond to each of these functions . (1)
Technological progress isn't necessarily going to increase unemployment
because I can see that in this place nothing much has changed
(2)
The boss laid off a lot of people last year
The firm was terribly unsteady economically
I use intentionally the vague term of segment, which can designate a single utterance just as well as a string of utterances having, from the argumentative point of view, a certain functional homogeneity. I shall call the construction of two segments, one of which argues in favour of the other, an argumentative pair; I shall call the segments supporting and supported, respectively. The resulting analysis can be applied recursively, so that a pair that acts as a supporting, or as a supported, segment will itself constitute a segment in a higher-order pair. Contrary to the current practice in pragmatic linguistics (Anscombre & Ducrot, 19 83; Moeschler, 19 85) , I shall not take into consideration argumentative relations in absentia, which involve the extrapolation of implicit propositions, but only those that are given explicitly in discourse. Nor shall I seek to analyze the value of argumentative connectors or operators; I shall limit myself to observing whole "sense effects". Finally, I shall limit what I have to say to strictly monologal discourse.
3. First Level of Analysis: the Argumentative Arrangement Applied to whole discourses, the analysis that comes of the principles presented above results in a hierarchical organization of arguments, in other words in an arborescent system of argumentative pairs (Apoth€loz & Mieville, 1986). For reasons of space, I shall not dwell on this first level. I would, however, like to mention that this method led us to
411
catalogue, from a corpus gathered in a study of representations of technological change, a considerable number of argumentative arrangements in the form of loops. In actual fact, these were cases where the speaker, by way of a conclusion or in any case an end to all or part of his talk, reformulates the segment that was at the beginning of an argumentative itinerary. The functions that can be ascribed to this kind of procedure are of course extremely diverse: phatic, in the event of a pause or hesitation; conclusive, when the reformulation marks the end of a development and is followed by the introduction of a new theme; cognitive, when the speaker is confronted with a problem of coherence in his own discourse, when he attempts to check a digression, etc. In this connection it seems important to notice that coherence is not a problem that concerns the addressee alone; when discourse is not planned, in other words when it is spontaneous, the speaker himself is constantly being confronted with the coherence of what he is in the process of saying - this is made clear whenever he corrects or cancels what he says after saying it, as we pointed out above.
4. Second Level of Analysis; the Patterns of Reasoning The grouping together, under the generic term of argument, of explanatory and plausibilizing functions, led us to catalogue six families of patterns of reasoning: i.
Reasons
ii.
Causalities
iii. Purposiveness iv.
Appeals to facts
v.
Comparisons
vi.
Reformulations of the supported segment
i. Reasons. Those given for the content of an utterance a string of utterances should be distinguished the act of enunciation
(Snoncö) or
from those given for
(enonciation). In the latter situation, the
argument plays the role of a "shifter", in the sense of Jakobson (1971), so it may lead its author to leave the theme of debate and
412
to thematize the situation of interlocution itself. In that case the speaker engages in what we have called "control discourse". ii. Causalities. They are of two kinds: empirical, when the supporting segment indicates the cause of a fact or event of a non-psychological nature, and psychological, when it indicates the motive either of an action taken by a subject or of a psychological state of the subject. Piaget (1923) called this type of explanation "motivation". Example (2) illustrates this pattern. In practice, it is sometimes a delicate matter to distinguish causality from reason. The essential difference must consist in causality's always assuming a certain action, a functioning that is "attributed" (in Piaget's sense) to reality. iii. Purposiveness (finalites) . This explains the action of a subject by indicating the intention of his action. In this sense, it can be said that purposiveness attributes to the subject the anticipation of a judgment of causality (if I do X, then Y). It seems to us that in an argumentative discourse the notion of purposiveness can occur in at least three ways: simply by being asserted ("we relieve each other every week, so that it's not always the same one who gets tired") , by having a counter-purpose ("..., otherwise it's always the same one who gets tired"), or by having a refuted purpose ("..., and it's not for the pleasure of changing")3. The latter case may lead to a counter-discourse. iv. Appeals to facts. These involve referring the addressee to the real world. Strictly speaking, then, there is no reasoning - not, at least, according to the usual sense of the term - in this practice, but instead recourse is made to an observation that every sensible person is capable of making. Example (1) illustrates this pattern. v. Comparisons. These involve bringing together two facts or states of affairs, either to assimilate them to each other more or less strongly (analogies) or, as in (3), to insist on some difference (contrasts). (3)
it's not like the people who work at the bench, on production
413 vi. R e f o r m u l a t i o n s of the s u p p o r t e d s e g m e n t . These are
argumentative
pairs in w h i c h the s u p p o r t i n g s e g m e n t refers to the same t h e m e as the supported segment and says practically the same thing a b o u t it. The r e f o r m u l a t i o n c a n be c a r r i e d out by d e s c r i p t i o n
("underneath it
all, there isn't any solidarity; everyone has his little job, r e a l happy to have it, real h a p p y to keep it"), by s p e c i f i c a t i o n
("the
new techniques have c h a n g e d my w o r k - they've made it b e t t e r " ) , or amplification
("..., they e v e n b r o u g h t b i g
changes").
In some concrete examples w e n o t i c e d that these patterns of reasoning o f t e n p e r f o r m b o t h p l a u s i b i l i z i n g and explanatory at once. The examples I have g i v e n of r e f o r m u l a t i o n by
functions
description
and by specification are i l l u s t r a t i o n s of this. It is u n d e n i a b l e , h o w e v e r , that certain p a t t e r n s are p r e d i s p o s e d to carry o u t one function or the other. Our o b s e r v a t i o n s thus allow us to set d o w n , as h y p o t h e s e s , the f o l l o w i n g
principles:
a) exclusively p l a u s i b i l i z i n g functions, as in
(1), are b r o u g h t
about by appeals to facts, by comparisons or by r e f o r m u l a t i o n s , b u t never by the other p a t t e r n s ; b) exclusively explanatory
functions, as in
(2), are b r o u g h t about
by causalities, by p u r p o s i v e n e s s or by reasons b e a r i n g on the act of e n u n c i a t i o n 4 , b u t never b y the o t h e r patterns} c) appeals to facts are always and e x c l u s i v e l y
plausibilizing;
d) r e f u t e d purposes are always and e x c l u s i v e l y
explanatory;3
e) reasons b e a r i n g on the c o n t e n t of an u t t e r a n c e always combine a p l a u s i b i l i z i n g w i t h an e x p l a n a t o r y
function.
5. T h i r d level of A n a l y s i s ; R e p r e s e n t a t i o n s and Schemas of R e a s o n i n g W h e n we r e c o n s t r u c t the a r g u m e n t a t i v e a r r a n g e m e n t of a d i s c o u r s e and catalogue the v a r i o u s p a t t e r n s of r e a s o n i n g that sustain it
(le-
vels 1 and 2), w e carry out this work w i t h o u t prejudice as to the correctness of the r e a s o n i n g u s e d by the speaker. The only t h i n g that matters to us is to s p o t a r g u m e n t a t i v e pairs and to i d e n t i f y the patterns. M o r e o v e r , the p e r s u a s i v e e f f e c t of an argument is only
414 slightly tied to rationality or to the correctness of the reasoning on which it rests. Nevertheless, once the analysis has been carried out, it is possible to return to the various patterns, to examine the way in which they have actually been brought about, and to attempt to bring the schemas of reasoning to light. This constitutes the third level. Consider the following example:
(4)
then that will lead to more consumption
I think that with these new technologies, by producing a lot more parts, these parts will be a lot less expensive
the people who use them will need them
since the parts will be less expensive
Β
It will be recalled that every configuration of the
£ , j type repre-
sents an argumentative pair and that the supporting segment is always to the right. The arrows indicate that the actual order of the segments in discourse consisted in stating the supporting segment first, then the supported segment, and not the converse as in the examples examined previously. Here, then, the order is B-A-D-C. There is little to say of the pair
[a,b] which, in our culture,
is a commonplace of economic theory. As for segment C, its interest is twofold. First, its formulation appears incomplete and the expression "will need them" surely has to be understood as "will need them more". Second and most important, even fixed up in this way it has a somewhat paradoxical effect: although it is given as an intermediate element in the chain of reasoning
(D-+-OA, i.e. less expensive
parts •* increased need -*• increased consumption) , in other words as being closer to A than to D, it seems to have a lower argumentative yield than segment D. Indeed it is hard to imagine in what place, in what field of representation the relevance of the causal relation "less expensive -+ increased need" could be grounded. The author of this argumentation himself must have felt a problem of coherence, since he continued
(corrected?) his discourse as follows:
415
"Because the new parts, now, they do it in plastic. So they'll be less solid than the others, before, that were metal. They won't last as long, in my opinion." So here we have coherence back again
This quasi-substitution allows
the reconstitution of two chains of reasoning, which can be represented thus: be in plastic be less solid produce more parts in less time
last less long
less expensive parts
increased need
increased consumption As far as their logic is concerned, what these two chains have in common is to be articulated by causalities. They differ, however, with regard to the field of representation in which their relevance is grounded. It can be said of the chain of reasoning on the right that its author takes complete responsability for it, step by step; but the one on the left, by its enthymemic short-cut, reveals the appropriation, by the author of the discourse, of a precoded schema of reasoning resulting from a particular representation. 6. Conclusions The foregoing considerations are obviously extremely succint. They are intended nevertheless to show the point, in the study of argumentation, of distinguishing several levels of problems. On the level of interaction between speakers, it is possible to grasp argumentative phenomena as functional relations between segments of discourse. On the level of logic, the patterns of reasoning that make up an argumentation can be catalogued and classified, independently of any semantic consideration. Finally, on the level of representations , it is possible to take content into consideration: to spot schemas of reasoning, to study the way in which they were put to use in the discourse, to reflect on the kind of thought from which they
416
result, on their fields of relevance and on their places of constitution (Vergäs, 1986). As a matter of fact, this last level amounts to placing the problem of argumentation in a wider perspective that is at once socio-cultural and cognitive.
Translated
*
*
by James
Gasser
*
Notes 1. This work was carried out as part of a joint research project of the Departement Information et Formation en Economie, CNRS-IRPEACS (Ecully, France), the Centre de Recherche en Ecologie Sociale, CNRSEHESS (Marseille, France) and the Centre de Recherches Semiologiques of the University of Neuchätel (Switzerland) on representations of technological change. The Swiss part of this research was supported by a grant from the Swiss National Science Foundation (no 1.74 3-0.83). The examples quoted here are taken from a corpus of interviews gathered in connection with this project. 2. Gardies (1979:233) says of this: "Le raisonnement spontane, dans son contact constant avec 1'experience, peut d'autant plus facilement se dispenser d'une coherence integrale, que les objets sur lesquels il porte sont toujours la pour soutenir son cheminement et lui permettre de se rattraper de son d§sequilibre; qu'il ne soit pas un raisonnement formel signifie que le reel est constamment a sa disposition pour lui servir de garde-fou". 3. Strictly speaking, patterns of reasoning by refuted purpose do not "explain", but imply one explanation by the rejection of another. On analysis, it is seen that the implied explanation does not always allow an unequivocal reconstitution of itself. 4. The reasons for an act of enunciation can only be explanatory, for plausibility cannot be added to an act.
417 References
Anscombre, J.-C., Ducrot, 0.
(1983). L'argumentation dans la
langue. Bruxelles: Mardaga. Apotheloz, D., Mieville, D.
(19 86). Coherence et discours
argu-
mente. In M. Charolles, ed. The Resolution of Discourse. Hamburg: Buske Verlag. In press. Borel, M.-J.
(1984). Dimensions du raisonnement non formel et
logique-calcul. In Grize, ed. Gardies, J.-L.
(1984), 113-154.
(1979). Essai sur la logique des modalites. Paris:
Presses Universitaires de France. Grize, J.-B., ed.
(1984). Semiologie du raisonnement. Berne: P.
Lang. Jakobson, R.
(1971). Shifters, Verbal Categories, and the Russian
Verb. In Selected Writings II. The Hague-Paris: Mouton, 130-147. Moeschier, J.
(1985). Argumentation et conversation. Elements pour
une analyse pragmatique du discours. Paris: Hatier. Piaget, J.
(1923). Le langage et la pens€e chez 1'enfant. NeuchStel:
Delachaux & Niestle. Verges, P.
(19 86). A Social and Cognitive Approach to Economic
Representations. In Current Issues in European Social Psychology II. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. In press.
47 Dilemmas of the Inductive/Deductive Distinction John E. Nolt
Logicians' conceptions of the inductive/deductive distinction differ widely. Yet the differences, though often significant, are seldom explicitly recognized. I will discuss two dilemmas posed by attempts to define the distinction. The first is whether to state the distinction in terms of the actual strength of the reasoning or in terms of someone's assessment of the strength of the reasoning. I shall call definitions of induction and deduction based on actual strength logical definitions and those based on someone's assessment of strength intentional definitions. For example, of the two pairs of definitions given below, the first is logical and the second intentional. (1) A deductive argument is one in which the conclusion is necessary, given the premises. An inductive argument is one in which the conclusion is probable but not necessary, given the premises.^ (2) A deductive argument is one in which it is claimed that the conclusion is necessary, given the premises. An inductive argument is one in which it is claimed that the conclusion is probable but not necessary, given the premises.2 The intentional definitions in (2) use the notion of a "claim" (presumably the arguer's) concerning the strength of the reasoning. Other variants in the literature appeal to the "intended," "purported" or "supposed" strength of the reasoning.
419
Intentional definitions are convenient if one wants to have both valid and invalid deductive arguments. of course, if
is a deductive
A valid deductive argument,
argument whose conclusion must be
its premises are true,
i.e.,
true
by (2) an argument which is cor-
rectly claimed to be valid; and an invalid deductive argument is by (2) an argument which is incorrectly claimed to be valid. cal definitions such as (1),
the expressions
'valid'
On logi-
and
'deduc-
tive' are synonymous; there are no invalid deductive arguments. Intentional
definitions
also
allow
a
between good and bad inductive arguments. are
arguments are
distinction
Good inductive arguments
whose conclusions are correctly claimed to be prob-
able but not necessary given arguments
parallel
their
premises,
and
bad
inductive
arguments for which this claim is incorrectly made.
This distinction is overshadowed, however, by the fact that on both sorts of definitions,
inductive arguments vary in strength.
Thus
it is often overlooked. Intentional definitions have serious drawbacks. their applicability is
severely
limited.
usually) an arguer has no opinion, cerning whether his probability
conclusion
from his premises.
entered his mind.
even con-
with
necessity
or
mere
The distinction may not even have
He may hold only that the premises "support" the
conclusion in some unspecified way. neither
(perhaps
and hence makes no claim,
follows
Often
For one thing,
inductive
nor
between the cracks of
deductive. intentional
His argument, then, Such
arguments
distinctions.
is by (2) simply fall
This
slippage
between the cracks frequently goes unnoticed. But
failure
to
notice
it
is dangerous.
For example,
authors who use intentional definitions also assert that arguments are simply the nondeductive ones.^ that
many
But we have just seen
definitions
Another pitfall results from combining intenwith
terns of inference (e.g., others
inductive
arguments are neither inductive nor deductive on inten-
tional definitions. tional
some
the usual classification of certain patargument by analogy)
(e.g., modus ponens) as deductive.
as
inductive
and
For someone arguing by
modus ponens may nevertheless fail to claim that her argument is
420 valid;
hence by (2) her argument is
modus ponens. his
a
nondeductive
hence by (2) he has offered a anyone
of
Or someone arguing by analogy may fail to claim that
conclusion is probable but not necessary,
Thus
instance
noninductive
given his premises;
argument
by
analogy.
who uses a definition like (2) and yet classifies all
modus ponens arguments as deductive or all analogical arguments inductive is guilty of inconsistency. The
same
problem
infects
other
inductive/deductive distinction. the
distinction
intends, the
is
framed
Such guilt is variants
It makes no
of
the reasoning,
tional attitude.
of the intentional difference
whether
in terms of what the arguer claims or
or in terms of what is purported or
strength
as
widespread.^
supposed
concerning
or in terms of some other inten-
There will always be cases in which the relevant
attitude is either indeterminate or absent. Worse,
there will be cases in which it is wrong.
people arguing by analogy sometimes
claim
are
(2),
would require us to classify their arguments
deductive
and analogical.
given their premises.
that
conclusions then,
necessary,
mistakenly
For example, their
Allegiance to as
both
There are probably also cases in which
people argue by modus ponens (or some other valid form) and
hedge,
claiming merely that the conclusion is probable given the premises. Thus if we accept (2) we may well have to admit inductive instances of modus ponens. At
the
root
of these anomalies lies the fact that intentional
definitions classify toward
them,
not
arguments
according
authors
who
attitudes
try
not a logical one.
Thus Typi-
to use this psychological distinction to
delineate logical kinds simply blind themselves sing consequences.
people's
according to intrinsic logical features.
they mark a psychological distinction, cally,
to
to
the
But this is hardly satisfactory.
definitions may have some use in the psychology
of
embarrasIntentional
argumentation.
But I shall lay them aside, since I am concerned with logic. There
is
a
second
deductive distinction: in
choice to be made in framing an inductive/ the choice between stating the
definitions
terms of probability and necessity and stating them in terms of
evidential support.
The definitions given in (1) and (2) used the
421
concepts of probability and necessity. tions probabilistic.
We shall call such defini-
And we shall designate as evidential defini-
tions which use instead the concept of evidential the
support.
Thus
following pair of definitions is evidential (and also logical,
as opposed to intentional): (3)
A deductive argument is one whose premises if true provide conclusive evidence for its conclusion. An inductive argument is one whose premises if true provide evidence, but not conclusive evidence, for its conclusion.5
(Sometimes the term 'support' is used in place of 'evidence'.
It
may also be said, rather loosely, that the premises "make" the conclusion
necessary
or "enhance" its probability.)
The distinction
between probabilistic and evidential definitions is the
orthogonal
distinction between logical and intentional definitions.
tentional versions of evidential definitions literature;
but
since
also
appear
to In-
in
the
they are subject to the criticisms already
raised against intentional definitions in
general,
they
need
no
separate discussion here.® Probabilistic ones.
definitions
differ substantially from evidential
One case which highlights the difference is the inference of
a logically necessary conclusion from irrelevant premises (see below).
Since
the
conclusion must be true if the premises are,
such an argument is deductive on logical probabilistic such as (1).
it is neither inductive nor deductive
on logical evidential definitions such as (3).
Arguments with in-
consistent and irrelevant premises work the same way. an
definitions
But since the premises, being irrelevant, provide no
evidence for the conclusion,
if
(4)
extremely
Similarly,
weak and hence inherently probable conclusion is
inferred from irrelevant premises,
then that conclusion
is
prob-
able given those premises, even though they provide no evidence for it
(see
(5)
below).
Thus the inference is inductive on logical
probabilistic definitions but again neither inductive nor deductive on logical evidential ones. The choice between probabilistic and evidential definitions constitutes our second dilemma, for both have serious disadvantages.
422
The chief disadvantage of evidential definitions is that they clash with classical deductive logic. Inferences with inconsistent premises or tautologous conclusions are regarded as both deductive and valid in classical logic. Yet in many cases their premises provide no evidence for their conclusions; hence as we have seen they are not deductive (and not inductive either) on evidential definitions. It might be replied that in some degenerate sense such premises do provide "evidence" for their conclusions. But this is so only in the sense that the conclusion is necessary, given these premises. It is perverse to give an evidential definition and then where it doesn't fit covertly appeal to a probabilistic one. 7 The cases in which evidential definitions clash with classical logic are exactly the cases in which relevance logic clashes with classical logic. If our fundamental logic were relevance logic, an evidential inductive/deductive distinction would be unobjectionable. But one freguently finds evidential definitions coupled inconsistently with classical deductive logic.8 Since most of us want to keep classical logic, a probabilistic version of the inductive/deductive distinction may seem more congenial. But probabilistic versions have their own problems. The worst is the problem of clarifying the notion of probability used in the definition of 'inductive argument'. This problem is notorious.9 But it is balanced on the side of evidential distinctions by the equally difficult task of clarifying the idea of evidential support. A second problem with probabilistic versions has already been mentioned: they are counterintuitive. Consider again the fact that they classify all arguments with logically necessary conclusions as deductive. For example: (4) You have not proved that the sky is both blue and not blue. The sky is not both blue and not blue. Initially this classification strikes everyone as wrong, but most of us have been convinced of its appropriateness by prolonged exposure to classical logic. Less familiar, and perhaps even more
423 counterintuitive are the analogous cases in inductive logic: ments in which premises. (5)
a
weak
conclusion
is
inferred
from
argu-
irrelevant
For example: You haven't proved that my savings account balance is exactly $4,267,593.01. My savings account balance is not exactly $4,267,593.01.
The
conclusion
of
this
argument
is so weak that it is probable
given the premise, even though the premise provides no evidence for it.
(To make it clear that the premise provides no evidence,
pose
that
the
"you"
referred to in the premise has not tried to
prove anything about the account in question.) inductive so,
intuitions
This
on a probabilistic definition -- indeed,
which is odd.
sup-
argument
is
quite strongly
Evidential definitions seem much closer to our
here.
On an evidential definition,
this argument is
neither inductive nor deductive; we might simply characterize it as "fallacious." In fact,
both (4) and (5) are textbook cases of the fallacy
ignorance, one of the so-called fallacies of relevance. adopt
of
Thus if we
both a logical probabilistic inductive/deductive distinction
and a traditional approach to informal fallacies (as
many
authors
do), we must countenance some instances of the fallacy of ignorance which
are deductive and some which are strongly inductive.
These
consequences are awkward at best. Finally, evidential
probabilistic ones
from
definitions
seem
more
distant
than
what really matters in argument evaluation:
how well the premises actually support the
conclusion.
books which use probabilistic definitions,
the chief consideration
in evaluating nondeductive arguments is evidential
Even
support;
in
prob-
ability per se plays a relatively minor role. Again,
however,
this
is offset on the side of evidential dis-
tinctions by the fact that in chief
consideration
deduction), cept
is
most
validity
treatments (the
of
deduction
probabilistic
concept of
and little if anything is said about the broader
of evidential support.
Indeed,
the con-
no matter which form of the
inductive/deductive distinction an author adopts, her discussion of
424 deduction is likely to proceed as were being used,
if
a
probabilistic
definition
and her discussion of induction is likely at some
point to presuppose an evidential definition.
The
inconsistency
is seldom noticed. I
can
see
two coherent solutions to the second dilemma.
first is to combine an evidential version of tive
distinction
with
and deductive logic. entrenchment,
inductive/deduc-
a consistent relevantism in both inductive This solution is
clarity
the
The
and
radical;
because
of
simplicity of classical logic,
little chance of widespread acceptance.
it has
The second is to combine a
probabilistic version of the distinction with a consistently sical
approach
clas-
to both inductive and deductive logic -- and learn
to live with the awkward and counterintuitive consequences probabilistic definitions.
of
the
The central issue of how well a set of
premises supports a conclusion is not answered from this view
the
point
of
merely by classifying the argument as inductive or deductive.
It requires in addition the assessment of relevance as dimension
of
argument
evaluation.
analyzed into two components:
Thus
a
separate
evidential support is
inductive probability (whose maximal
limiting case is deductive validity) and relevance. NOTES ^Further examples of
logical
definitions
may
be
found
in
Carlsen-Jones (1983: 54), Nolt (1984: 5-6), Salmon, M. (1984: 32), Salmon, W. (1984: 45), and Skyrms (1975: 10-13). ^Further (1980: 10-11),
examples
of
intentional definitions occur in Barry
Carney and Scheer (1980: 10-11),
Copi (1982:
51),
Hurley (1982: 21), Klenk (1983: 7), and Simco and James (1983: 1). 3
F o r an example, see Carney and Scheer (1980: 10-11).
4
T h e following,
for example,
present intentional definitions
and yet seem to classify all instances of modus ponens as deductive and all arguments by analogy as inductive:
Barry
and Scheer (1980), Copi (1982), Simco and James ^Further
examples
of
logical
(1980),
Carney
(1983).
evidential definitions may be
found in Carlsen-Jones (1983: 54) and Salmon, M. (1984: 32).
425 ^Further e x a m p l e s of i n t e n t i o n a l e v i d e n t i a l d e f i n i t i o n s m a y be found in Copi (1982: 51) a n d K l e n k
(1983: 7).
^This is done o v e r t l y in S a l m o n M. unaware
of
the
distinction
(1984: 32).
S a l m o n seems
b e t w e e n p r o b a b i l i s t i c a n d evidential
definitions. 8
T h i s is arguably the case in all the w o r k s m e n t i o n e d in notes
5 a n d 6. ^A u s e f u l o v e r v i e w is p r o v i d e d in Skyrms (1975: •^For a n e l a b o r a t i o n of this idea, and K a h a n e , " Informal Logic,
200-215).
see my "Replies to
Thomas
forthcoming. REFERENCES
Barry, V i n c e n t E. (1980). P r a c t i c a l Logic, 2nd ed. Holt,
Rinehart
and Winston. Carlsen-Jones, M i c h a e l T.
(1983) I n t r o d u c t i o n to Logic. M c G r a w -
Hill. Carney, J a m e s D. a n d R i c h a r d K. Scheer (1980). F u n d a m e n t a l s of Logic.
Macmillan.
Copi, Irving M. (1982). I n t r o d u c t i o n to Logic, 6th ed. M a c m i l l a n . Hurley, Patrick J. (1982).
A Concise I n t r o d u c t i o n to Logic.
Wadsworth. Klenk, V i r g i n i a
(1983). U n d e r s t a n d i n g Symbolic Logic.
Prentice-
Hall. Nolt, J o h n Eric (1984). Informal Logic: Possible W o r l d s Imagination.
and
McGraw-Hill.
Salmon, Merilee H. (1984).
I n t r o d u c t i o n to Logic a n d Critical
Thinking. H a r c o u r t B r a c e Jovanovich. Salmon, W e s l e y C. (1984). Logic, 3rd ed.
Prentice-Hall.
Simco, N a n c y D. a n d Gene G. J a m e s (1983) E l e m e n t a r y logic, ed. Wadsworth. Skyrms, B r i a n (1975). Choice and Chance: A n I n t r o d u c t i o n to Inductive Logic.
Dickenson.
2nd
48 Dialectical Arguments, Matters of Degree, and Paraconsistent Logic Lorenzo Pena
This
paper
shows
that
the boundary
between yes-no questions
m a t t e r s of d e g r e e is a m a t t e r of d e g r e e More no
precisely
put: matters-of-degree
questions,
in virtue
is n o t w h o l l y of d e g r e e ,
false
of
the
is t r u e .
itself --a fuzzy
This
borderline.
are also amenable
taking-up is w h y
to
principle,
viz.
on arguing
about
whatever matters
everybody
c o m m o n l y d o e s , w e b o t h s u b j e c t the i n v o l v e d p r o p e r t i e s t o
excluded-
and
yet
recognize
that
a thing may
arguments
yes-or-
as
middle
i.e. on c o n s t r u c t i n g dialectical
and
(to
some
p r o p e r t y of t h e k i n d w h i l e a l s o l a c k i n g it u p to a S e c t . 1.— I n t u i t i v e a n d T h e o r e t i c a l Use
of
comparative
partisans
of c l a s s i c a l
question
'Is
Brian
fat?'
a
has
fat
predicate while
than...'
fatness
average
of
been hard
to c o p e
relevant
answer
could
replaced by some
such people as the
be
to
'Less 1
by the
than
a s a pr_i
'to b e n o
standard
subject's
with
thing,
' to-be-less-f at-than
'to b e f a t ' w o u l d a b b r e v i a t e
w i t h the blank
a
point.
(CL f o r s h o r t ) . F o r o n e
Lloyd'. Now, such approaches as take mitive
have
Motivations
constructions logic
extent)
less
(such a s
referent were
the most
c o m m o n l y c o m p a r e d w i t h , o r a n y t h i n g of t h a t ilk) c a n n o t e x p l a i n that in
the
above
involved;
question
otherwise
and answer
the
answer
apparently
wouldn't
same
But then how can one same predicate be used both as a one-place
one
less
fat than...'
nor
the
which
is is.
be no
apposite,
predicate it
a n d a s a t w o - p l a c e o n e ? S t i l l , if
be
one
'to b e fat' n o w i s e a b b r e v i a t e s 'to
like,
then how
fat should a man
f o r h i m to q u a l i t y a s f a t , p e r i o d ? A w e l l - k n o w n s o r i t e s s h o w s if L l o y d
is
fat a n d Brian
we are entitled
just
a trifle
to say that B r i a n
is f a t ,
less
fat
be
that,
than Lloyd,
too. By mathematical
then in-
427
d u c t i o n we conclude that e v e r y o n e is fat. Since there are thin people and thinness
is included in the complement of fatness, we
get
at the c o n t r a d i c t i o n that some fat people are not fat. 'Fat' term.
is a
term w e
So are
'blue',
learn by o s t e n s i o n . 'mountain',
It is a n
observational
'water'. Each of them gives
rise
to similar troubles. How b l u e a thing needs to be for it to qualify as blue? How d i s t a n t ought
it to be from purple,
from green,
from
b l u i s h w h i t e ? Is every
(seeable) thing blue? Is every hillock, every
mound,
a mountain?
however
small,
Is every
liquid
H 2 0 , however viscous or h e a v y or thick, w a t e r ?
mix
containing
(Is e v e r y t h i n g water
after all?) U p h o l d e r s of CL c a n still avail themselves of a number of solutions. Chief among them is arbitrarily to define those p r e d i c a t e s so as to block the unwelcome conclusions. A m o u n t a i n , e.g., will
be a n e a r t h e n h e i g h t of
at
least
985 yards a n d such
that...
Thus,
'mountain' stops being a n o b s e r v a t i o n term we learn by o s t e n -
sion.
(Or take Quine's w a y out in "What Price B i v a l e n c e ? " , WPB
short:
'mountain' used to be a n o b s e r v a t i o n term, but then w e
tunately
didn't know a b o u t m a t h e m a t i c a l
for for-
induction or at least
re-
frained from applying it; w h e n a f t e r w a r d s we apply it, the term has become a theoretical one we are unable to learn by o s t e n s i o n , w h i c h frees
us
from
the
unwanted
result
of
every
little
mound
being
m o u n t a i n and every sand g r a i n being a m o u n d . But then how is
a
lan-
guage learning possible at all? For, w h e n learning the language we, according
to that view, came to believe a n a l y t i c a l l y
false
senten-
ces; w h e n we then w a i v e them, nothing of what we had learnt can jus tifiably remain.) F u r t h e r m o r e , o n those terms thus becoming
theore-
tical ones noone can learn by ostension, they no longer can be a m e nable to comparative constructions.
(If to be tall is to m e a s u r e at
least 178.45201cm from foot to head, them nobody is taller than any one else. ) C o n s i d e r a t i o n s of that k i n d lead us to at the very least conclude
that
some
things
b o t h have and
lack
those properties,
asserting that they have them is in some u t t e r a n c e - c o n t e x t s tically more relevant than d e n y i n g it, and conversely. are
both
clever
and
foolish;
sometimes
even
if
pragma-
(Some people
it b o t h rains and
rain, and so on.) Besides, for a number of such predicates
doesn't (perhaps
even for all of them) we can set up a c h a i n of steps leading by m a thematical
induction to the conclusion that every entity
(at least
428 w i t h i n a very large field of entities) has the property under
con-
sideration. Solutions available w i t h o u t injuring CL invariably bring about (more or less) unpalatable This paper's classical those
results.
aim is not to explore or c r i t i c i z e
in detail
solutions, but to set up a nonclassical a p p r o a c h
such
(one of
'fuzzy and m u l t i v a l u e d a l t e r n a t i v e s . . . h o w e v e r unlovely'
e v e n Q u i n e himself in W P B v i e w s as w o r t h y of serious
that
consideration).
The fuzzy approaches set up and w o r k e d u p o n of late (since a 1965 pioneer paper by Lofti Zadeh) have b r o u g h t about a r e n e w e d need for a rigorous, formal treatment of d i a l e c t i c a l a r g u m e n t s . As u n d e r s t o o d a n d cultivated, fuzzy-set theories a b a n d o n
excluded-mid-
dle (and n o n - c o n t r a d i c t i o n ) , thus m a n a g i n g to side-step ry
conclusions.
On
the
other
hand,
the
apparently
initially
contradicto
more
intuitive
kind of a p p r o a c h the p r e s e n t paper a d v o c a t e s favours treating
fuz-
ziness in such a w a y that b o t h n o n c o n t r a d i c t i o n and e x c l u d e d m i d d l e are some
kept
as
valid principles,
contradictory
but the
conclusions
as
price
true.
If,
is p a i d of e.g.,
endorsing
some
region
is
far less fertile t h a n others while at the same time being up to a point fertile, then we commonly say that it is neither fertile barren, whence it follows that it b o t h is and is not fertile. the
more
classically
instead a d j u d i c a t e
minded
"official"
fuzzy-set
theorists
is that in such a case we c a n neither
nor What
would
say
that
it is fertile nor say that it is not fertile: we c o u l d n ' t say anything at all a b o u t its fertility: only if a r e g i o n were
altogether
fertile,
i.e. such that no other region w a s m o r e fertile, could we
say that
it was fertile; all that strikes me as strongly
counter-
intuitive and has of course g i v e n rise to serious o b j e c t i o n s against prospects of
fuzzy
scientific problems; fraught
with
no
approaches
to
the formal
such
cope
both
linguistic
and
t r e a t m e n t s k e t c h e d h e r e i n below
ineffableness
quite the contrary. The price
with
and
maximalist
is
consequences,
it has to pay, though,
is
(over
and
above the m e r e a c c e p t a n c e of true c o n t r a d i c t i o n s , o n its o w n an unfair
price
according
to p r o b a b l y m o s t people as have b e e n
in CL) w h a t Kitcher w o u l d call
1
steeped
'hyperbolism , viz.: admitting
that
w h a t e v e r is not wholly poor is rich, a n d conversely --and so on for every other pair of c o m p l e m e n t a r y p r o p e r t i e s . The rule that generalizes s u c h inferences I call
'the taking-up rule':
completely the case that p" to conclude
"not-p".
from "It's not
429 S e c t . 2 . - S k e t c h i n g o u t a F o r m a l A c c o u n t of t h o s e
Ideas
In t h i s S e c t i o n I s k e t c h o u t the s e m a n t i c a l l y d e f i n e d f i r s t o r d e r p r e d i c a t e c a l c u l u s A r g w h i c h c a n b e u s e d for s e t t i n g u p f u z z y consistent
set-theories
capturing
the
ideas
set
forth
para-
above.
(My
n o t a t i o n c o n v e n t i o n s a r e ä la C h u r c h : a d o t w r i t t e n i m m e d i a t e l y
af-
ter a f u n c t o r s t a n d s for a left p a r e n t h e s i s w i t h its m a t e a s far to the r i g h t a s p o s s i b l e . R e m a i n i n g a m b i g u i t i e s a r e d i s p e l l e d ting
associa-
leftwards.)
W e t a k e the
(standard) r e a l i n t e r v a l
(0,0·
any
t h a t O s r s l , let the t h r e e f o l l o w i n g p a i r s b e c a l l e d {r,2}, {r,3}, {r,4}. W e n o w i n t r o d u c e a n o r d e r t h e n {r,2} perreals
s {r f 3}
£ {r,4 } < {r',2}
h as {0,3}
s h s { 1,3}
w h e r e r' = ( i )
1/lo
r
such
hyperreals:
S l i k e t h i s : if r Px] by (Vx:Sx)[Px], for example. Recent linguistic, mathematical, and logical investigations of quantification all indicate important reasons to think that this is not just a handy option, to be used when convenient, but that we should consider restricted quantification as fundamental, and unrestricted quantification a variant which is sometimes available. There are several considerations. (1) The syntax of restricted quantification more nearly matches that of natural language. For example 'all Serbs are polite' can be analyzed as [[all Serbs]Np[are politely] g, but not as, say, [[all]q[Serbs are polite]g]g. (2) Using restricted quantification, we can enlarge our logical vocabulary to include quantifiers like 'most', 'few', 'nearly all', 'all but seven', 'at least three', 'the', etc., which can then be more adequately treated. In contrast, there is no way to capture the sense of 'most Serbs are polite' with unrestricted quantification; there is no appropriate way to complete the sentence 'most things are such that ...' so that it will mean that most Serbs are polite. More specifically, if we introduce y to mean most, there is no sentential connective that can replace the question mark in (yx)[Sx ? Px] to get the effect of the sentence 'most Serbs are polite'. On the other hand, in the restricted formula (yx:Sx)[Px] no connective is needed. (This observation only holds up, of course, if we can supply an appropriate semantics for the re-
443 s t r i c t e d formula. (3)
W e turn to this next.)
W e get a u n i f o r m semantics for
'three',
'the',
'both',
the w o r k of M o n t a g u e
'most', etc.
'all',
'all b u t
three',
S u c h a semantics derives
from
(1973), and distinct b u t equivalent versions
are g i v e n in Barwise and C o o p e r
(1981) and B r o w n (1984).
latter v e r s i o n is a bit easier to explain.
The
With each quantifier Q
w e a s s o c i a t e a q u a n t i f i c a t i o n a l function fq in such a w a y that, for any subset σ of the domain D, fg(o) is a family of subsets of σ. If a is the set of all Serbs, for example, and Q is μ (i.e. m o s t ) , then the a p p r o p r i a t e v a l u e for ίμ(σ) is the family of all those sets of Serbs that count as constituting m o s t of the Serbs.
If π
is the set of all p o l i t e b e i n g s , then the semantics has the formula (ux:Sx)[Px] true if and only if σ η π 6 ί^(σ), i.e. if a n d only if the Serbs that are p o l i t e constitute m o s t of the Serbs. account is applied, m u t a t i s m u t a n d i s , tor any other
The same
quantifier.
For the familiar quantifiers, w e find that f ν ( σ ) is just {σ}, so all Serbs are p o l i t e if and only if the Serbs w h o are polite constitute the w h o l e set σ; a n d f 3 ( o ) is the family of all n o n - e m p t y subsets of σ, so some Serbs are p o l i t e if and only if the set of Serbs w h o are p o l i t e is n o n - e m p t y .
These are surely the correct
truth conditions for such sentences. (4)
We get u s e f u l a l g e b r a i c closure proprties in the class of
quantifiers.
For one thing, every quantifier w i l l h a v e a dual and
a contradictory.
The q u a n t i f i c a t i o n a l f u n c t i o n a s s o c i a t e d w i t h the
contradictory of Q, for example, w i l l b e just the relative m e n t of the q u a n t i f i c a t i o n a l f u n c t i o n for Q itself.
comple-
Moreover,
for
any pair of quantifiers, there is a conjunctive c o m p o u n d w h i c h acts as a single quantifier, as w h e n
'at least three' a n d 'at m o s t
three' combine in 'exactly three'. pounds
So, for example, w e get com-
'at least three and at m o s t six' and 'a few and nearly all'.
The quantificational f u n c t i o n for such a c o m p o u n d is just the i n t e r s e c t i o n of the functions for the separate But only for very special cases
quantifiers.
(most n o t a b l y for V and 3, and
perhaps also for quantifiers definable in terms of these) can w e provide rules of inference in anything like the "natural style of m a t c h e d introduction and exploitation rules
deduction"
connecting
444 q u a n t i f i e d formulas to closely r e l a t e d u n q u a n t i f i e d formulas.
Re-
v e r t i n g for a m o m e n t to the m o r e familiar u n r e s t r i c t e d style of quantification, w e are u s e d to seeing n a t u r a l d e d u c t i o n rules ς}χφχ
/.'.
Φ[ί/χ]
Φ[ί/χ]
Exploitation
Qx$x
Introduction
/.".
in w h i c h the defining feature m a y b e t a k e n to b e that w e are enabled to replace w o r k w i t h q u a n t i f i e d formulas b y w o r k w i t h u n q u a n t i f i e d instances.
their
If n a t u r a l d e d u c t i o n rules, thus u n d e r -
stood, didn't incorporate any further r e s t r i c t i o n s , then as a m a t t e r of n e c e s s i t y w e couldn't h a v e m o r e than one q u a n t i f i e r o b e y e d such rules.
that
If two quantifiers b o t h o b e y e d rules as simple
as these, they w o u l d b e p r o v a b l y equivalent. Q i x i x to C2, and Cx?tC2. ready g e t t i n g m o r e
Clearly things are al-
complex.
But for the quantifier
'exactly two', things get w o r s e still. W e
w i l l w a n t e x p l o i t a t i o n rules similar to those for
'at least two',
b u t w e w i l l also w a n t another ancillary rule w h i c h allows us to infer that (Vx)[Φχ => x=ci ν x=C2Ü.
For the corresponding
introduc-
tion rule, w e w o u l d n o w n e e d four p r e m i s s e s :