Deriving the evidence asymmetry in positive polar questions

Kyle Rawlins
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Abstract

This paper explores a famous puzzle about English positive polar questions introduced by Buring and Gunlogson 2000: while in many contexts they seem to indicate nothing whatsoever about what the speaker takes for granted or thinks likely, in contexts that provide evidence against the content proposition of the question, they are infelicitous. This pattern, which I term the "evidence asymmetry", has been particularly troubling for standard accounts of polar questions that treat the positive and negative answers on par with each other. However, given that polar questions are felicitous in neutral contexts, it doesn't have an easy solution: polar questions in general don't seem to place constraints on evidence or context. I propose that polar questions have a fairly weak presupposition requiring just the content alternative to be possible (but say nothing about its negation), and (building on Trinh 2014) that this together with Maximize Presupposition-based reasoning about competitor questions (specifically"or not" alternative questions) can derive the evidence asymmetry. This account does not require the covert evidential marker of Trinh 2014, and essentially proposes that the evidence asymmetry follows from norms for English polar questions.
正极性问题中证据不对称的推导
本文探讨了 Buring 和 Gunlogson 2000 年提出的关于英语正极性问题的一个著名谜题:虽然在许多语境中,正极性问题似乎并不表明说话人认为理所当然或可能发生的事情,但在提供了与问题内容命题相反的证据的语境中,正极性问题就显得不恰当了。这种模式被我称为 "证据不对称"(evidence asymmetry),它对极性问题的标准解释尤其令人不安,因为极性问题将肯定答案和否定答案同等对待。然而,鉴于极性问题在中性语境中是善意的,它并没有一个简单的解决方案:极性问题一般似乎并不对证据或语境施加限制。我提出,极性问题有一个相当弱的预设,只要求内容替代是可能的(但对其否定只字未提),(在 Trinh 2014 的基础上)这与基于最大化预设的竞争者问题(具体来说是 "或不 "替代问题)的推理一起,可以得出证据不对称。这种解释不需要 Trinh 2014 的隐蔽证据标记,主要是提出证据不对称来自英语极性问题的规范。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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