Logic List Mailing Archive

Morphological, Syntactic and Semantic Aspects of Dispositions

25-27 Jun 2015
Stuttgart, Germany

Call for Papers: Workshop on the Morphological, Syntactic and Semantic
Aspects of Dispositions

University of Stuttgart, Germany

25 June ? 27 June 2015

https://sites.google.com/site/dispositions2015

The goal of this workshop is to explore questions about the morpho-syntax,
semantics and underlying ontology of words and constructions used to
describe dispositions. The central aim of the workshop is to develop a
better understanding of how existing and novel insights from different
approaches to dispositions can be integrated into a single theory of
dispositions and their linguistic descriptions.

Invited Speakers:

Artemis Alexiadou (Stuttgart)
Elena Castroviejo (Madrid)
Ariel Cohen (Beer Sheva)
Bridget Copley (Paris)
Nora Boneh (Jerusalem)
Hans Kamp (Stuttgart)
Marika Lekakou (Ioannina)
John Maier (Cambridge, to be confirmed)
Christopher Pinon (Lille)
Stephan Schmid (Berlin)
Barbara Vetter (Berlin)

Questions to be addressed by the Workshop:

1. What are the truth conditions of dispositional statements?
2. How are these truth conditions determined compositionally?
3. In what ways can dispositions be linguistically expressed?
4. What are linguistic tests for dispositionality?
5. Are there distinct notions of ?disposition? between which a linguistic
theory of disposition description should distinguish?
6. Among the words that can be used to express dispositionality are nouns,
adjectives and verbs. What systematic connections are there between the ways
in which different parts of speech do this, in particular between deverbal
nouns and adjectives and the underlying verbs?
7. What role do temporal and aspectual sentence constituents play in the
verbal expression of dispositions?
8. How do dispositional statements differ from habitual and frequency
statements?
9. What relations are there between dispositions and causality?
10. One of the constructions that can be used to describe dispositions are
middles. (An example: the German sentence `Dieser Satz liest sich leicht?
(?This sentence is easy to read?)). Is ?middle? a morpho-syntactic or a
notional concept? Where do the argument positions of disposition-expressing
middles come from? What is the syntax-semantics interface for these
constructions?

For a more detailed outline of the Workshop and a list of selected
references, please consult the Workshop homepage:

https://sites.google.com/site/dispositions2015/general-information


Call for Papers:

We welcome submissions for a 20 minute talk (followed by 10 minutes of
discussion) or a poster on any topic relevant to the goals of the workshop.
We particularly welcome contributions addressing the linguistic relevance of
philosophical insights on dispositions or the philosophical relevance of
linguistic insights on dispositions.

All submitted abstracts should be written in English and be limited to two
single-spaced pages, complete with examples and bibliography. All texts
should fit within two A4 pages, with 2,54 cm/1-inch margins all around. Each
abstract should start with the title (centered) at top, above the main text.
Use font size 12 throughout (except for examples), preferably in Times or
Times New Roman. The abstract should be camera-ready. Authors may submit at
most one individual and one co-authored abstract.

Save your abstract as a PDF. Name your abstract with your last name followed
by the suffix pdf (e.g., huang.pdf). Submit your abstract via the EasyChair
Conference, online submission system:

https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=dinl2015

Please leave your name and affiliation out of the abstract. Please indicate
whether your abstract is for a talk, a poster or both.

Deadline for submissions: March 1st, 2015
Notification of acceptance: March 31st, 2015

Contact: dispositions.workshop@gmail.com
Organizers: Fabienne Martin, Marcel Pitteroff, Tillmann Pross
Funded by the Collaborative Research Centre SFB 732 "Incremental
Specification in Context"