The Inheritance of Presupposition

Pragmatics & Beyond, 11:1. John Benjamins (1981)
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Abstract

This work presents a procedural account of the so-called projection problem for presupposition. It is assumed that presuppositions embedded in complex sentences are subject to no projection rules or ad-hoc conditions whatever, but are in fact satisfied in appropriate contexts in a completely uniform way. It is demonstrated that the apparent filtering, alteration, or preservation of an embedded presupposition is in evry case a logical consequence of a general, independently motivated model of language processing and knowledge representation. It is shown in detail that turning the projection problem upside-down in this way leads to a far more explanatory and descriptively adequate accunt that any previously proposed.

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Mental Spaces from a Functional Perspective.John Dinsmore - 1987 - Cognitive Science 11 (1):1-21.

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