Order-Based Salience Patterns in Language: What They Are and Why They Matter

Ella Kate Whiteley
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Abstract

Whenever we communicate, we inevitably have to say one thing before another. This means introducing particularly subtle patterns of salience into our language. In this paper, I introduce ‘order-based salience patterns,’ referring to the ordering of syntactic contents where that ordering, pretheoretically, does not appear to be of consequence. For instance, if one is to describe a colourful scarf, it wouldn’t seem to matter if one were to say it is ‘orange and blue’ or ‘blue and orange.’ Despite their apparent triviality, I argue that order-based salience patterns tend to make the content positioned first more salient – in the sense of attention-grabbing – in a way that can have surprising normative implications. Giving relative salience to gender differences over similarities, for instance, can result in the activation of cognitively accessible beliefs about gender differences. Where those beliefs are epistemically and/or ethically flawed, we can critique the salience pattern that led to them, providing an instrumental way of evaluating those patterns. I suggest that order-based salience patterns can also be evaluated on constitutive grounds; talking about gender differences before similarities might constitute a subtle form of bias. Finally, I reflect on how the apparent triviality of order-based salience patterns in language gives them an insidious strength.
语言中基于顺序的显著性模式:它们是什么,为什么重要
每当我们进行交流时,我们不可避免地要先说一件事,然后再说另一件事。这就意味着在我们的语言中引入了特别微妙的显著性模式。在本文中,我提出了 "基于顺序的显著性模式",指的是对句法内容进行排序,而这种排序在理论上似乎并不重要。例如,如果要描述一条五颜六色的围巾,说它是 "橙色和蓝色 "还是 "蓝色和橙色 "似乎并不重要。尽管表面上看起来微不足道,但我认为,基于顺序的显著性模式往往会使排在前面的内容更加显著--从吸引注意力的意义上来说--从而产生令人惊讶的规范性影响。例如,相对于相似性而言,给予性别差异相对的显著性可能会激活人们对性别差异的认知信念。如果这些信念在认识论和/或伦理上存在缺陷,我们就可以对导致这些信念的显著性模式进行批判,从而提供一种评估这些模式的工具性方法。我认为,基于顺序的显著性模式也可以从构成的角度进行评估;在谈论相似性之前谈论性别差异可能会构成一种微妙的偏见。最后,我反思了语言中基于顺序的显著性模式表面上的微不足道是如何赋予它们一种隐蔽的力量的。
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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