On fatal competition and the nature of distributive inferences
Author(s)
Bar-Lev, Moshe E.; Fox, Danny
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Abstract
Denić (2018, 2019, To appear) observes that the availability of distributive inferences—for sentences with disjunction embedded in the scope of a universal quantifier—depends on the size of the domain quantified over as it relates to the number of disjuncts. Based on her observations, she argues that probabilistic considerations play a role in the computation of implicatures. In this paper we explore a different possibility. We argue for a modification of Denić’s generalization, and provide an explanation that is based on intricate logical computations but is blind to probabilities. The explanation is based on the observation that when the domain size is no larger than the number of disjuncts, universal and existential alternatives are equivalent if distributive inferences are obtained. We argue that under such conditions a general ban on ‘fatal competition’ (Magri 2009a,b, Spector 2014) is activated, thereby predicting distributive inferences to be unavailable.
Date issued
2023-09-25Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Linguistics and PhilosophyPublisher
Springer Netherlands
Citation
Bar-Lev, Moshe E. and Fox, Danny. 2023. "On fatal competition and the nature of distributive inferences."
Version: Author's final manuscript