Ontogenetic constraints on Grice's theory of communication

In Danielle Matthews (ed.), Pragmatic Development in First Language Acquisition. pp. 87-104 (2014)
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Abstract

Paul Grice’s account of the nature of intentional communication has often been supposed to be cognitively too complex to work as an account of the communicative interactions of pre-verbal children. This chapter is a (fairly uncritical) review of a number of responses to this challenge that others have developed. I discuss work on Relevance Theory (by Sperber and Wilson), Pedagogy Theory (by Gergely and Csibra), and Expressive Communication (by Green and Bar-On). I also discuss my own response to the challenge of Gricean communication.

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Richard Moore
University of Warwick

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