What if I said the following: If one of you completes the quest i'll give you a thousand euro, if no one completes the quest you all get a piece of candy. - Afterwards, one person succeeds in te quest, but I dont give him the cash price and I dont give anyone the piece of candy either- How can this be true?
@@keaswaran0 I have just sort of solved the case (I think), because on the truth table p->q v ~p -> r , is always true. So the literal/conventional meaning is true. But it can be argued to be misleading I think
@@keaswaran0 Because the Conversational implicature would probably contain, the actual promise of giving the rewards. And the speaker therefore does not abide by the conversational maxims
@@Acez-lf4qk I was interpreting the claim as (p->q)&(~p->r), with an "and" rather than an "or". There would definitely be a conversational implicature of the "and" if you said the "or", but if you actually said the "and" (or said both sentences separately, which I think should be the same as saying them with an "and") then it would just be literally false if you didn't do the thing that you said you would in that case.
as a dyslexic linguistic student i am going to put this simply: THANK YOU!
thank you! this is the reading for my literary theory seminar and it is dense
Very well made video, well explained
What if I said the following: If one of you completes the quest i'll give you a thousand euro, if no one completes the quest you all get a piece of candy. - Afterwards, one person succeeds in te quest, but I dont give him the cash price and I dont give anyone the piece of candy either- How can this be true?
If I understand your scenario right, I think that what you said would be false if you don't give the prize or the candy.
@@keaswaran0 I have just sort of solved the case (I think), because on the truth table p->q v ~p -> r , is always true. So the literal/conventional meaning is true. But it can be argued to be misleading I think
@@keaswaran0 Because the Conversational implicature would probably contain, the actual promise of giving the rewards. And the speaker therefore does not abide by the conversational maxims
@@Acez-lf4qk I was interpreting the claim as (p->q)&(~p->r), with an "and" rather than an "or". There would definitely be a conversational implicature of the "and" if you said the "or", but if you actually said the "and" (or said both sentences separately, which I think should be the same as saying them with an "and") then it would just be literally false if you didn't do the thing that you said you would in that case.
Very epic👌
you skip so many points and you are like doing reading. Try to add your points