Manfred Krifka (Leibniz-ZAS Berlin / HU Berlin)
Indicative and Subjunctive Conditionals as Operations on Commitment Spaces
In
spite of mainstream semantic modeling, there is evidence that
conditional sentences do not express conditional propositions, but
conditional speech acts. I will propose a model for conditional speech
acts using the notion of commitment spaces (Krifka 2015, SALT 25), a way
of modeling the common ground in a conversation that does not only
include the propositions that are assumed to be shared by the
interlocutors, but also the possible continuations of this set of
propositions in the further conversational development. The essential
idea is that a conditional like If John was at the party, the party was fun states
that for every continuation in which it gets established that John is
at the party, the speaker is committed to the truth that the party was
fun.
I
will show how this model can be extended to accommodate counterfactual
conditionals. The idea is that counterfactuals reduce the set of assumed
propositions so that the antecedent propositions can be entertained,
followed by a restriction for continuations from that set. A conditional
like If John had been at the party, the party would have been fun states
that whenever the propositions that rule out that John was at the party
are removed from the common ground, all continuations from that modfied
common ground in which it gets established that John was at the party
are such that the speaker is committed to the truth that the party was
fun. I argue that past tense phenomena in counterfactuals can be
understood as indicating a stepping back from assumptions that have
already been established in the common ground.