Difference between revisions of "Meaning postulate"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Haspelmath (talk | contribs) (from Utrecht Lexicon of Linguistics) |
(No difference)
|
Latest revision as of 16:26, 6 October 2007
A meaning postulate is a device used in logical semantics to stipulate semantic relations between lexical items. Meaning postulates were introduced in Carnap (1947) in order to account for the fact that a sentence like (i) is an analytic truth, true in every model. The meaning postulate in (ii) captures this analyticity:
- (i) Bachelors are unmarried
- (ii) For all x, if x is a bachelor, then x is unmarried
Meaning postulates can be seen as an alternative for decomposition of word meaning (see componential analysis). They are extensively used in Montague Grammar.
Link
Utrecht Lexicon of Linguistics
Reference
- Carnap 1947
- Gamut, L.T.F. (1991) Logic, language, and meaning, Univ. of Chicago Press, Chicago.
Other languages
German Bedeutungspostulat