
Diverging Evidence in Semantics and Pragmatics
University of Toronto Press
Published on 26. May 2026
Book
Hardback
306 pages
978-1-4875-7570-0 (ISBN)
Description
In recent years, research on the nature of linguistic evidence has gained significant attention. One key finding is that linguistic inquiry should not rely solely on a single source of evidence such as introspection, corpus data, or real or thought experiments, but rather combine several types within a single study. However, integrating these diverse forms of evidence presents serious methodological challenges.
Broadly, two main situations can arise. The first is the convergence of evidence, wherein different types of data jointly support a hypothesis. In such cases, the hypothesis becomes more robust than it would be if supported by only one kind of evidence. Over the past decade, the concept of converging evidence in linguistics has been widely explored and discussed. The second, much less studied situation, is the divergence of evidence. Evidence diverges when different sources point towards incompatible hypotheses about a linguistic phenomenon. While convergence strengthens theoretical claims, divergence exposes inconsistencies that require explanation.
Written accessibly, Diverging Evidence in Semantics and Pragmatics focuses on cases in which diverging evidence in semantics and pragmatics leads to inconsistencies, providing insight on how linguistic theories can account for conflicting data and the challenges they pose for empirical research.
Broadly, two main situations can arise. The first is the convergence of evidence, wherein different types of data jointly support a hypothesis. In such cases, the hypothesis becomes more robust than it would be if supported by only one kind of evidence. Over the past decade, the concept of converging evidence in linguistics has been widely explored and discussed. The second, much less studied situation, is the divergence of evidence. Evidence diverges when different sources point towards incompatible hypotheses about a linguistic phenomenon. While convergence strengthens theoretical claims, divergence exposes inconsistencies that require explanation.
Written accessibly, Diverging Evidence in Semantics and Pragmatics focuses on cases in which diverging evidence in semantics and pragmatics leads to inconsistencies, providing insight on how linguistic theories can account for conflicting data and the challenges they pose for empirical research.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Toronto
Canada
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
Illustrations
10 illustrations
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
Thickness: 25 mm
Weight
1 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-4875-7570-0 (9781487575700)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Andras Kertesz is a professor emeritus at the Institute of German Studies, University of Debrecen.
Csilla Rakosi is a research professor at the Institute of German Studies, University of Debrecen.
Csilla Rakosi is a research professor at the Institute of German Studies, University of Debrecen.
Content
Contributors
Introduction
Andras Kertesz and Csilla Rakosi
Part I: Foundational Issues
1. On the Relation between Thought Experimental and Real Experimental Reports in Pragmatics
Andras Kertesz and Csilla Rakosi
2. The Mask Denial Paradox: A New Approach to the Identification and Analysis of Pseudoscientific Texts
Csilla Rakosi
Part II: Diverging Evidence in Pragmatics
3. How the Conception of Lying Is Interpreted by Hungarian Language Users: Results of a Questionnaire Investigation
Ahmad Adha and Eniko Nemeth T.
4. Corpus Data in Pragmatics: Conventionally Indirect Requests with Tud ("Can/Know") in Hungarian
Katalin Nagy C.
5. Investigating Particularized Conversational Implicature in Corpora
Zsuzsanna Nemeth
6. Cyclic Argumentation in Deictic Research: A Case Study on the Use of Demonstratives
Eniko Toth and Peter Csatar
7. Questioning Strategies to Resolve Inconsistency in Witness Testimony: A Case Study of Hungarian Criminal Trials from a Continental Law Perspective
Marianna Varga
Part III: Diverging Evidence in Semantics
8. A Plausible Conception of Semantically Motivated Syntactic Arguments
Karoly Bibok
9. Non-Referring Definites and Intuitive Truth-Value Judgments: A Debate
Approached through the P-Model
Zoltan Vecsey
Index
Introduction
Andras Kertesz and Csilla Rakosi
Part I: Foundational Issues
1. On the Relation between Thought Experimental and Real Experimental Reports in Pragmatics
Andras Kertesz and Csilla Rakosi
2. The Mask Denial Paradox: A New Approach to the Identification and Analysis of Pseudoscientific Texts
Csilla Rakosi
Part II: Diverging Evidence in Pragmatics
3. How the Conception of Lying Is Interpreted by Hungarian Language Users: Results of a Questionnaire Investigation
Ahmad Adha and Eniko Nemeth T.
4. Corpus Data in Pragmatics: Conventionally Indirect Requests with Tud ("Can/Know") in Hungarian
Katalin Nagy C.
5. Investigating Particularized Conversational Implicature in Corpora
Zsuzsanna Nemeth
6. Cyclic Argumentation in Deictic Research: A Case Study on the Use of Demonstratives
Eniko Toth and Peter Csatar
7. Questioning Strategies to Resolve Inconsistency in Witness Testimony: A Case Study of Hungarian Criminal Trials from a Continental Law Perspective
Marianna Varga
Part III: Diverging Evidence in Semantics
8. A Plausible Conception of Semantically Motivated Syntactic Arguments
Karoly Bibok
9. Non-Referring Definites and Intuitive Truth-Value Judgments: A Debate
Approached through the P-Model
Zoltan Vecsey
Index