WĄGIEL, Marcin. Annihilating atoms with entity partitives. In Department of Linguistics, 10/05/2022, University College London. 2022.
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Basic information
Original name Annihilating atoms with entity partitives
Authors WĄGIEL, Marcin (616 Poland, guarantor, belonging to the institution).
Edition Department of Linguistics, 10/05/2022, University College London, 2022.
Other information
Original language English
Type of outcome Requested lectures
Field of Study 60203 Linguistics
Country of publisher United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
RIV identification code RIV/00216224:14210/22:00129314
Organization unit Faculty of Arts
Keywords in English partitives; part-whole structures; mereology; mereotopology; subatomic quantification; atomicity
Tags rivok
Tags International impact
Changed by Changed by: Mgr. Marcin Wągiel, Ph.D., učo 362974. Changed: 8/1/2023 15:46.
Abstract
In standard theories of pluralities and countability, the mass/count distinction is often formulated in terms of atomicity (e.g., Link 1983, Landman 1991, 2000, Chierchia 1998, 2010, Champollion 2017). Despite significant differences in particular theories, the contrast between count and mass nouns usually boils down to the (non-)existence of minimal building blocks in their denotations or, alternativley, to a distinct nature of those building blocks. The approach developed in this talk rejects the view that what counts as `one' is best represented as an atomic entity. Instead, building on a mereotopological approach to nominal semantics (Grimm 2012, see also Casati & Varzi 1999) I propose that countability is a feature of individuals that constitute non-overlapping and integrated wholes (as opposed to, e.g., scattered entities and arbitrary sums). The evidence comes from entity partitives involving numerical quantification over material parts of referents of concrete count singular NPs, e.g., *three parts of the teddy bear*. First, I will present the problem such constructions pose for atomicity-based approaches to the mass/count distinction. Next, I will discuss two attempts to account for that problem, i.e., the theories of Chierchia (2010) and Landman (2016), and point what I believe to be their shortcomings. Then, I will argue for two claims, specifically (i) having a notion of atomicity is not enough for a full analysis of entity partitives and (ii) atomicity is actually not needed for that purpose since it can be replaced by mereotopological notions which are required independently. Finally, I will discuss independent cognitive evidence which seems to support my approach.
Links
GA20-16107S, research and development projectName: Struktury část-celek napříč jazyky
Investor: Czech Science Foundation
PrintDisplayed: 8/9/2024 01:19