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![]() Notes on show: Original Airdate 8/22/2006 |
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About the Guest Dan Sperber is a French social and cognitive scientist who holds a research professorship at the French Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique in Paris and has developed a cognitive approach to communication known as "Relevance Theory" and is the author of several books covering language and culture. Listening Notes John
and Ken begin the show by illustrating how multifaceted and nuanced
language in action can be by proceeding through a number of
miscommunications and confusions arising from everyday language use.
Ken distinguishes between semantics, syntax, and pragmatics. Dan Sperber goes on to describe the Grice's idea of conversational implicature and the vast amount of information that is conveyed in successful communication which is not contained in the individual words used. The use of implicit meaning is the core topic of pragmatics, and John compares Grice's maxims for understanding this type of meaning with Sperber's theory. Ken returns to the banality of implicit meaning and Dan and Ken discuss the intricacies of the simple word "and" in the English language. Ken wonders why instead of dealing with messy things like speaker intention we can't just give many definitions for each words. Furthermore, how is it possible for us to understand so much intention, don't we have to be mind readers to simply communicate if so much of our language is implicit? John, Ken, and Dan discuss callers' ideas about language and communication, relating stories about communication and miscommunication, surprising anecdotes about people understanding things without language, and analysis of the amazing way we all communicate with and without words.
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