Dissertation, Doctoral School of Linguistics, University of Debrecen, Hungary (
2012)
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Abstract
The thesis is a metatheoretical analysis of the concept of ‘speaker’s intention’ as it is used
in traditional linguistic-philosophical and in cognitive pragmatics. The analysis centers around
works of Austin, Searle, Grice, and Relevance Theory. The main aim is to argue for the following
thesis:
(T1) if pragmatics is targeting on how speaker’s intentions contribute to linguistic choices in communicative language use, then focusing solely on causally efficient mental states and analyzing
them at the utterance level necessarily leads to unsatisfactory consequences in theorizing.
The secondary aim of the dissertation is to argue that: (T2) the traditional account of intentionality is tenable only if we take utterances as data.
Surely, there are causally efficient intentions which lead the speaker to formulate her utterances
as part of conversational turns. But speakers also have intentions which shape the conversation
itself (motives, goals, plans). However: (T3) if we take discourses or conversations as divergent sources of data (besides of utterances), we run into an explanatory gap that cannot be filled mechanically: the structured-proposionalist theory is simply insufficient to grasp discourse-level intentions.
To argue for (T3), I analyse speaker’s intentions in a fictive conversation (The smuggler
sketch from Monty Python’s Flying Circus) through the “prisms” of Austin’s speech act theory,
Searle’s (at least) two theories of intentions, Grice’s M-intention, and the ostensive-inferential
view on communication.