SADAF | Sociedad Argentina de Análisis Filosófico  | 
Lunes. 28  de Abril de  2025

Elementos filtrados por fecha: Abril 2025

Comienza el martes 14/03/17

Semanal

Coordinan: Eleonora Orlando y Andrés Saab

Publicado en Anteriores / Past

Comienza el martes 14/03/17

Martes 17.30-19.00 hs. 1er. martes de cada mes

Coordina: Cecilia Hidalgo

Publicado en Anteriores / Past

143

 

The Poverty of the Stimulus Argument
Once Again
[El argumento de la pobreza del estímulo, una vez más]

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Liza Skidelsky
 171

Una teoría del concepto de primera persona
[A Theory of the First-Person Concept]

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Javier vidal
199 

Oraciones evaluativas y los compromisos de la aserción

[Evaluative Sentences and Assertorical Commitments]

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Justina Díaz Legaspe
225 

Modelando la aserción relativista
[Modeling Truth-Relativistic Assertion]

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Ramiro Caso
261

El pensamiento animal y su expresión lingüística
[Animal Thoughts and its Linguistic Expression]

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Laura Danón

 NOTA CRÍTICA

291

Hacia una genealogía de la mente: Una
aproximación filosófica a los conceptos  psicológicos
[Towards a Genealogy of the Mind: a Philosophical Approach
to Psychological Concepts]

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Antoni Gomila

IN MEMORIAM

299

Gladys Palau: en memoriaGladys Palau: en memoria

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José Antonio Castorina
303

Evocación y semblanza de
Osvaldo Guariglia

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Samuel m. Cabanchik

 

Publicado en Indices / Indexes

Variedades del escepticismo y del antiescepticismo 
[Varieties of Skepticism and Anti-Skepticism]

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Manuel Pérez Otero
 29

Assertion, Justificatory Commitment, and Trust
[Aserción, compromiso justificativo y confianza]

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Fernando Rudy Hiller
55 

Desigualdad global y coerción
[Global Inequality and Coercion]

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Francisco García Gibson
75 

Implicancias prácticas del liberalismo
igualitario: criterios de equidad tributaria
[Liberal Egalitarianism and its Practical
Implications: Tax Fairness Criteria]
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Cristián A. Fatauros
103 

L’ esecutore privilegiato di Dio:
La figura de Moisés en la obra
de Nicolás Maquiavelo
[l’ esecutore privilegiato di Dio:
The figure of Moses in the work of
Niccolò Machiavelli]
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Eugenia Mattei
  RESEÑA
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Publicado en Indices / Indexes

David Embick (University of Pennsylvania)

Lunes 19 y miércoles 21 de diciembre de 2016

In these lectures I will examine connections between three phenomena or effects. The first involves the idea that certain competitions for form evidently do not have a unique winner, such that a single structure receives multiple pronunciations: e.g. the nouns cover, coverage, and covering (the last on the non-gerund reading). This "Apparently Non-Unique Competition" is noted in recent works on derivational morphology (e.g. Embick and Marantz 2008, Borer 2013) but has not been analyzed in detail. A second effect is the intuition that speakers have concerning the "incorrect" selection of certain derivational allomorphs, such as confusal rather than confusion (compare e.g. refusal and refusion). Though the effect remains to be made precise, speakers have the intuition that some of the "non-existing" forms are possible outputs of their grammar, whereas e.g. incorrect tense forms like bended instead of bent are not.  The third effect involves apparently "long distance" effects in allomorph selection, where it appears that a suffix is sensitive to the identity of a prefix. For example, and assuming following much prior work (e.g. Aronoff 1976) that MIT is a bound Root in English, we find nominals permit, and permission, but not e.g. permittal; whereas with trans- we find transmittal and transmission, but no noun transmit.  According to theories that incorporate linear adjacency into allomorph selection (e.g. Embick 2010), such effects are not expected.

 The core of the lectures asks whether there is a unified explanation for why these three effects are found, and considers an answer that posits what I call polymorphy. Essentially, polymorphy is free selection of allomorphs under certain circumstances, a move that requires elaboration of typically employed competition mechanisms. Allowing polymorphyin some form resonates with difficult (and unresolved) questions from the early stages of morphological theory, in particular the notion of the potential lexicon from Halle (1973). The main direction of the argument is that while the effects mentioned in the first paragraph might provide an argument in favor of polymorphy, the pressing question that must be addressed is why some morphemes allow it, while others do not.  I will look at some different ways of making the relevant distinction(s) between morphemes, in ways that will begin to make contact with theories of context for polysemy resolution (allosemy).

Publicado en Anteriores / Past

 

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