| Literature DB >> 28453997 |
Karolina Krzyżanowska1, Peter J Collins2, Ulrike Hahn2.
Abstract
Reasoning with conditionals is central to everyday life, yet there is long-standing disagreement about the meaning of the conditional. One example is the puzzle of so-called missing-link conditionals such as "if raccoons have no wings, they cannot breathe under water." Their oddity may be taken to show that conditionals require a connection between antecedent ("raccoons have no wings") and consequent ("they cannot breathe under water"), yet most accounts of conditionals attribute the oddity to natural-language pragmatics. We present an experimental study disentangling the pragmatic requirement of discourse coherence from a stronger notion of connection: probabilistic relevance. Results indicate that mere discourse coherence is not enough to make conditionals assertable.Entities:
Keywords: Assertability; Discourse coherence; Indicative conditionals; Probabilistic relevance
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28453997 DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2017.03.009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cognition ISSN: 0010-0277