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5 - ON THE INTERPRETATION OF ‘DONKEY’-SENTENCES

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 August 2010

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Summary

Editors' note. Conditionals systematically affect the dependencies that may obtain between pronouns and their antecedents when they occur in the two different clauses of conditional sentences. Paradigmatic of such interactions are the ‘donkey’-sentences which have preoccupied linguistic theory and philosophical accounts of reference and quantification for a considerable time. Reinhart's paper presents a syntactic and semantic account of such sentences. All indefinite noun phrases are taken to be bound by other quantifiers and operators. This resolves the problem of interaction and shows that the phenomenon can be generalized to a much wider class, including some plurals.

THE PROBLEM

The so-called ‘donkey’-sentences pose well-known problems both to the semantic theory of scope and to the theory of anaphora:

  1. (1) a. If Max owns a donkey, he hates it

  2. b. If a vampire checks in, Lucie invites him to dinner

The pronoun in sentence (1a) can be anaphoric to a donkey, and the crucial point is that this is a case of bound-variable anaphora, rather than of pragmatic coreference. This can be observed if we compare such sentences with others having adverbial clauses, e.g.:

  1. (2) a. When Max owned a donkey, he hated it

  2. b. Since a stranger came in with a donkey, we had to provide some hay for it

In the sentences of (2) the pronoun refers to a specific donkey. Although the antecedent is indefinite, it has a fixed value; hence, this is a case of pragmatic coreference.

Type
Chapter
Information
On Conditionals , pp. 103 - 122
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1986

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