Abstract
As is well known, research on generics is represented by three approaches: majority-
based (Cohen 1996, 1999, 2004), normalcy-based (Nickel 2006; 2009; 2010a, b; 2013;
2016; 2018), and cognition-based (Leslie 2007a, b; 2008; 2013; 2017) approaches. Two
recent approaches proposed by van Rooij and Schulz (2020) and Tessler and Goodman
(2019) are more elaborated theories on generics, although neither of these approaches
nor the three representative theories can fully account for various generics data, as
argued by Yoon (2021). On the other hand, Nguyen (2020) proposes another theory of
generics, the so-called ‘radical’ theory, which argues that the generic operator has no
semantic content, and that the various quantificational interpretations of bare plural
generics are determined contextually. In this context, the main purpose of this paper is
to provide a critical review of some recently published analyses, including Nguyen’s
theory, and to analyze non-conventionalized generics. While conventionalized or
conceptualized generics have received much attention from researchers, non-
conventionalized generics have not been studied as extensively. It will be argued that
Nguyen’s theory simply transfers the burden onto pragmatics, and that non-
conventionalized as well as conventionalized generics tend to be interpreted based on
people’s perceptions of their exceptions, in line with Yoon (2021). This position will
be supported by experimental results.