Linguistics Seminar - Bernard Schwarz
10 February 2021, 3:00 pm–5:00 pm

Measurement monotonicity and comparisons of concentration
Event Information
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Organiser
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Richard JardineThe seminar will take place on Zoom. Please contact the organiser for the sign up details.
Seminar Title: Measurement monotonicity and comparisons of concentration
Based on joint work with Alan Bale (Concordia) and David Shanks (McGill).
Abstract: Grammar does not fully determine a measure function for much to invoke when combining with a mass noun, as in more water, more string, or more travel. But certain measure functions are invariably excluded. Schwarzschild (2006) argued that permissible measure functions must be monotonic—they must track the relevant parthood relation between entities in the mass noun’s extension. We draw attention to potential counterexamples to this constraint:comparisons of concentration, comparatives about the concentration of substances in substances that contain them. Such comparatives seemingly reference measure functions that are non-monotonic, as they seem to output degrees of purity or density (Bale and Barner 2009). Extending Bale and Schwarz (2020), however, we argue that they must not in fact be so analyzed. What such cases actually teach us, we propose, is that much can reference Skolemized measure functions—functions that map any individual, their Skolem argument, to a measure function. Comparisons of concentration can arise when different values serve as Skolem arguments in the main clause and in the comparative clause. Schwarzschild’s constraint, now extended to also apply to the outputs of Skolemized measure functions, can and must be upheld.
About the Speaker
Bernhard Schwarz
Associate Professor at McGill University
More about Bernhard Schwarz