This may be of interest to some philosophers:

Speaker: Emeritus Professor Tom Wasow, Department of Linguistics, Stanford 
University

Topic: Why are natural languages so ambiguous?


________________________________
From: Robin Blumfield <[email protected]>
Sent: 29 November 2018 09:02

Dear  All,

Please find below details of a talk by Emeritus Professor Tom Wasow from 
Stanford University in the CLaS-CCD Research Colloquium Series for 2018. The 
Colloquium Series provides an opportunity for national and international 
researchers to present talks and meet  with staff, HDR and senior undergraduate 
students, and aims to promote collaborative research links across Faculties 
within the University and with industry.

Date: Monday, 17 December 2018, 2.00pm - 3.00pm
Venue: The Australian Hearing Hub, Level 3, Room 3.610, Macquarie University
Speaker: Emeritus Professor Tom Wasow, Department of Linguistics, Stanford 
University
Host: Professor Mark Johnson
Topic: Why are natural languages so ambiguous?

Abstract
When computational linguists in the 1970s started building systems big enough 
to test on corpora of actual usage, they found that the systems were getting 
far more parses than they had expected for all but the simplest sentences.  
Most of these turned out to be linguistically justifiable parses, although the 
meanings assigned were often bizarre.  Linguists and philosophers of language 
have generally assumed that ambiguity hinders efficient communication, as 
expressed most explicitly and succinctly in philosopher Paul Grice's maxim, 
"Avoid ambiguity".  Since languages are constantly changing, why haven't 
languages become unambiguous or at least much less ambiguous? One reason may be 
that language has some uses that favor ambiguity.  Another is that eliminating 
ambiguity would slow down communication.  This talk examines various types of 
ambiguity in English and considers their possible functions.

Bio
Tom Wasow is Clarence Irving Lewis Professor in Philosophy and Professor of 
Linguistics, Emeritus and Academic Secretary to Stanford University. After 
completing undergraduate work in mathematics at Reed College and spending a 
year in Germany on a Fulbright, he began graduate study in linguistics at the 
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), where he wrote his dissertation 
under Noam Chomsky.  At Stanford University, he was involved in founding the 
Center for the Study of Language and Information, an interdisciplinary  
research institute, and the Symbolic Systems Program, an undergraduate major 
combining computer science, linguistics, philosophy, and psychology. He has 
also been heavily involved in administration, serving as a dean, department 
chair, program director, and director of a research institute, and is currently 
Academic Secretary to the University,  in which he oversees the operations of 
the Stanford Faculty Senate and the major university committees.

Emeritus Professor Wasow's early research was devoted largely to elaborating 
and supporting ideas put forward by Chomsky through the detailed investigation 
of various phenomena in English syntax.  Later, he was involved in the 
development of a theory of grammar called Head-driven Phrase Structure Grammar, 
and co-authored the first textbook on that theory.  In the last twenty-five 
years, he has focused more on studying how language is used, collaborating with 
psycholinguists and sociolinguists to answer the question of why people say 
things one way, rather than using a different construction that seems to convey 
the same meaning. Emeritus Professor Wasow is a Fellow of the Linguistic 
Society of America and of the American Association for the Advancement of 
Science.



Rosemary Eliott
Administrator, Centre for Language Sciences, Child Language Lab
Department of Linguistics   |   Level 3, Australian Hearing Hub
16 University Avenue
Macquarie University NSW 2109 Australia
Please note my working days are Tues/Wed
M: +  61 412 792 626 |  mq.edu.au
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