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Taking Scope The Natural Semantics Of Quantifiers Mark Steedman

  • SKU: BELL-4172260
Taking Scope The Natural Semantics Of Quantifiers Mark Steedman
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Taking Scope The Natural Semantics Of Quantifiers Mark Steedman instant download after payment.

Publisher: The MIT Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 13.65 MB
Pages: 324
Author: Mark Steedman
ISBN: 9780262017077, 0262017075
Language: English
Year: 2011

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Taking Scope The Natural Semantics Of Quantifiers Mark Steedman by Mark Steedman 9780262017077, 0262017075 instant download after payment.

In Taking Scope, Mark Steedman considers the syntax and semantics of quantifier scope in interaction with negation, polarity, coordination, and pronominal binding, among other constructions. The semantics is "surface compositional," in that there is a direct correspondence between syntactic types and operations of composition and types and compositions at the level of logical form. In that sense, the semantics is in the "natural logic" tradition of Aristotle, Leibniz, Frege, Russell, and others who sought to define a psychologically real logic directly reflecting natural language grammar.The book reunites the generative-transformational tradition initiated by Chomsky--which views the formal syntactic component as entirely autonomous---with the older, strongly lexicalist, construction-based tradition, which has sought to define a more lingistically transparent theory of meaning representation. Steedman offers a logical formalism that relates directly to the surface form of language and to the process of inference and proof that it must support. Such a natural logic, although formal by definition, should be allowed to grow organically from attested language phenomena rather than be axiomatized a priori in terms of any standard logic. Steedman also considers the application of natural semantic interpretations to practical natural language processing tasks, emphasizing throughout the elimination of traditional quantifiers from semantic formalism in favor of devices such as Skolem terms and structure-sharing among representations in processing.

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