CFP: Part-Whole Structure and its Reflection in Natural Language

Submission deadline: November 8, 2024

Conference date(s):
January 23, 2025 - January 24, 2025

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Conference Venue:

Bases, Corpus, Langage (CNRS/Université Côte d’Azur, UMR 7320) , Université Côte d'Azur
Nice, France

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The research labs ‘Bases, Corpus, Langage’ (UMR 7320, CNRS/Université Côte d’Azur) and ‘Savoirs, Textes, Langage’ (UMR 8163, CNRS/Université de Lille) are happy to announce a two-day workshop ‘Part-Whole Structure and its Reflection in Language’, which will take place in Nice on January 23-24, 2025.

Convenors : Lieven Danckaert (CNRS/Université de Lille, UMR 8163 STL), Friederike Moltmann (CNRS/Université Côte d’Azur, UMR 7320 BCL) and Fayssal Tayalati (Université de Lille, UMR 8163 STL)

Workshop description:

It has long been recognized that mereological relations play an important role in the semantics of natural language. In particular, it has become standard to make use of extensional mereology for the semantics of mass and plural nouns, conjunction, as well as various part-related expressions. Extensional mereology contrasts with integrity-based approaches to part-whole structure on which conditions defining an entity as an integrated whole play a central role in part-whole structures as well. Integrity-based approaches go back as far as Aristotle, but have gained increasing interest among semanticists as well since work by cognitive semanticists such Langacker and Jackendoff as well as Moltmann in the late eighties and nineties. Conditions of integrity, such as maximal connectedness, have been argued to matter for the choice of count categories, the semantics of classifier-like expressions, part-whole related expressions relating to individuals, and possessor constructions (e.g. the light verb HAVE). The notion of an integrated whole also matters for the semantics of intensional verbs of absence such as is missing and lack. The use of mereology in semantics has also faced serious criticism, though. For example, logicians like Yi, McKay, Oliver and Smiley have pointed out limits of mereology for the semantics of plurals, arguing that plurals do not stand for mereological sums, but for pluralities ‘as many’. Mereological accounts of mass nouns likewise face difficulties in that mass nouns do not seem stand for quantities as single entities, but for things that count as neither one nor many.

This workshop brings together new empirical and conceptual work relating to part-whole structure with its reflection in different linguistic phenomena. This includes typological work on classifiers and other part-whole related expressions, syntactic constructions pertaining to parts of a whole (such as verbs of possession and absence), notions of integrated wholes of mereotopological and functional sorts and their linguistic application, developments of plural reference and sui generis mass reference, and generalized non-boolean approaches to conjunction.

Confirmed speakers at the event include Luca Gasparri (CNRS, Université de Lille), Friederike Moltmann (CNRS, Université Côte d’Azur), Neil Myler (Boston University), Johan Rooryck (cOAlition S/Leiden University) and Viola Schmitt (Humboldt Universität zu Berlin).

We now invite abstract submissions for oral presentations of 30 minutes, followed by 10 minutes of discussion. Abstracts should be anonymous and no longer than two A4 pages, including references and examples, with margins of at least 2,5 cm / 1 inch.

Submissions should be sent to [email protected], preferably in pdf format.

Practical information will be posted in due time at http://www.friederike-moltmann.com/events/workshop-part-whole-structure-and-its-reflection-in-natural-language/.

Deadline for abstract submission: November 8, 2024

Notification of acceptance: November 20, 2024

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