Free Indirect Discourse

I went to an excellent paper by “Yael Sharvit”:http://www.sp.uconn.edu/~sharvit/ on free indirect discourse and _de re_ pronouns. I hadn’t seen any theoretical work on free indirect discourse before, so I spent most of the talk being flooded with lots of new information.

Sharvit argues that third person pronouns in free indirect discourse are not _de re_, which would be a really stunning result if it is true. It would really shake up a lot of the attitudes towards pronouns that have been orthodoxy ever since Kaplan’s early work. She also argues that theorising about free indirect discourse provides an argument for the existence of _de se_ pronouns in natural language.

I’d need to spend a lot of time to really evaluate the main argument, so I don’t want to endorse any of the conclusions in public yet. But I was really impressed by how sensitive the argument was to very delicate points of data. Philosophers are so often careless about the details of what they are doing when they discuss language. (I don’t mean all philosophers here, but I do mean to include me in the clumsy group.) The most obvious example is when a philosopher purports to be discussing the construction _If p then q_ and then never provides an example sentence containing the word _then_. There’s frequently an assumption that various constructions are to be treated alike, so it doesn’t matter if all of the data are drawn from one particular class within that construction. As I said, I do this too, so I’m throwing stones in glass houses here. But I’m always impressed when these assumptions get questioned, and especially when that questioning leads to results.

I could provide several examples of just this kind of questioning attitude from Sharvit’s paper, but unfortunately the paper isn’t online, so I can’t link to it, and I’d feel a little bad repeating some of the main examples before the paper goes into circulation. So I’ll just say a little bit about the background, and why we should be interested in free indirect discourse (FID). Compare first (1) and (2).

(1) John thought that the Red Sox should have won last year.
(2) The Red Sox should have won last year(, thought John).

FID is the second kind of report. The parenthetical addition is because it’s optional whether we need to say just who is doing the thinking, or even that it’s thinking, rather than say saying, that’s going on. It’s much easier in FID to leave this up to context than it is in regular indirect discourse. We see the first signs of a distinction in the way tenses are treated.

(3) John thought that it was time for a party.
(4) It’s time for a party, thought John.

Although we have to use ‘was’ in (3), we can use a present tense verb in (4). Indeed, it is better to use a present tense marker in (4). The same kind of thing applies to temporal pronouns. Assume that at 2 John thinks “I’ll will be there by three,” and the speaker is at the location denoted by John’s ‘there’.

(5) John thought that he/*I would be here/*there by now/three.
(6) He/#I will be there/*here by *now/three(, thought John).

In FID, ‘now’ is governed by the context of the thinker. Similarly the appropriate place pronoun is determined by the relation of the thinker to the place, not the speaker. But first-person pronouns seem to be different. ‘He’ is perfectly acceptable in (6), and ‘I’ is at least a little troubling. It’s not awful, I think, but ‘He’ is probably better. Still, the behaviour of ‘now’ is very strange, since we’re used to thinking that it just picks out the time of utterance in indirect reports.

There’s many many more examples where those came from, but as I said I’m a bit nervous of stealing Sharvit’s thunder. Hopefully her paper will appear shortly, and I can talk about the examples in greater detail, because the conclusions seem to be philosophically important.

Berkeley Stanford Davis Grad Conference

There doesn’t seem to be a fancy website for it, or indeed any website at all, but the Berkeley Stanford Davis grad conference is being held at UC Berkeley this Saturday. The keynote address will be by Alva No{e”}, and a program is available “here”:http://www.brown.edu/Departments/Philosophy/homepages/weatherson/bsd.pdf.

I’ve never seen a grad conference with four simultaneous sessions before. Then again, I’d never seen a single topic conference, like the INPC scepticism conference, with four simultaneous sessions before either. Maybe it’s a west coast thing.

Papers Blog – April 20

The “papers blog”:http://www.brown.edu/Departments/Philosophy/Opp/ is posted for the day. I don’t know why it didn’t get done yesterday. I think I thought it had been completed when really it, er, hadn’t. So there’s plenty to chew on today.

While on the topic of books available online, Jordan Howard Sobel’s massive “Logic and Theism: Arguments For and Against Beliefs in God”:http://www.utsc.utoronto.ca/~sobel/Logic_Theism/ should be mentioned, though it’s a little too big for me to read through.

“Stephen Mumford”:http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/philosophy/staff/Mumford/MumfordPage.htm has posted an “abstract”:http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/philosophy/staff/Mumford/allegianceandidentity.htm of a paper forthcoming in the _Journal of the Philosophy of Sport_ but he hasn’t posted the full paper so I can’t tell you what’s wrong with it. It is on one of my favourite topics – identity conditions for sporting teams over time. Or, as I call it these days, the Cleveland Browns problem. One might think the Cleveland Browns problem is the lack of a good quarterback, or running back, or receiver, or any other kind of player really, but those aren’t philosophical problems. Although, what with the trends these days, “maybe they are”:http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2004/04/20/1082395861338.html.

Graduate Students and Technology

David Velleman made a good suggestion for a blogpost a week ago, and I’m only now getting around to posting it. This is partially an indication of how far behind I am on my email, and partially an indication of how inefficient I get when baseball season starts. With apologies for tardiness then…

The hackneyed story about technology is that the young are always faster to pick it up than us old folk. So you’d expect in an academic department the graduate students would be the ones leading the way, and the professoriate would be constantly learning tricks from them. And while that’s true sometimes (I had to recruit Paul Neufeld of “ephilosopher”:http://www.ephilosopher.com/ fame to get started on Movable Type) it certainly doesn’t seem to be the general run of things. And certainly there’s lots of things about grad students could learn about technology from computer specialists. This suggests a professional question. How much technical knowledge/ability should we _require_ our graduate students to have.

Here’s some suggestions for skills graduate students should have. (All it turns out from David. I tried to add more of my own, and realised they weren’t anywhere near as interesting.)

* How to use Powerpoint in lectures
* How to manage a large course website, including interactive features
* How to setup maintain a large database for administrative tasks

And by ‘skills’ here I don’t mean the basic ability to do these things without looking really stupid, but the ability to efficiently integrate them into your daily routine when they are needed. Future faculty who can do these things will be better academics. At the very least they will be better teachers and better at running things like job searches and graduate admissions, and of course they can do much more than that. If the academic job search market were efficient, these skills would be rewarded. Even in the real world, departments would be doing the profession a service by turning out colleagues-to-be with these technical skills.

On one of these points I think there is a clear economic benefit to the students from acquiring technical skills. I think a well-maintained webpage, with your best work prominently displayed, is very helpful in a job search. And a fully functioning course site looks very impressive to those looking to evaluate your teaching ability. This isn’t going to override the crucial things like being able to write and teach well, but it certainly helps distribute the evidence that you can write and teach well. I think all grad students, should have web pages and departments should do what they can to provide these pages for just this reason.

I wonder which of these skills (or similar skills) will be viewed as being as basic as typing in a decade or two? I don’t know how long ago it was that one wouldn’t have been surprised to find that the new academic you hired couldn’t type. But whichever skills they are, I’m sure that soon some skills that we now view as esoteric will be basically expected of new hires.

David points out that philosophers have a particular reason to be interested in these questions. Some of us write about artificial intelligence, and many others cover it in their teaching. And a good working knowledge of what computers can and can do, preferably gained ‘first-hand’ while hacking around with some code, will be helpful to either role. Many philosophy departments dropped their language requirements over the last decade or so – maybe it’s time to reinstate something similar.

Social Knowledge

Some fun puzzles to think about.

_The Restaurant_
A group of us is trying to get to the restaurant. I know how to get from here to the bar, and Andy knows the way from the bar to the restaurant. And we’re both helpful sorts when it comes to information about directions. Do we, i.e. the group including me and Andy and a few others, know the way to the restaurant?

What if either Andy’s belief or mine is Gettierised – i.e. justified and true but acquired in a wacky way? (‘Wacky’ there is a technical term.)

_The Bodies_
Andy knows where all the French bodies are buried, and I know where all the German bodies are buried. It turns out, but neither of us know this, that all the bodies are French or German. Do we know where all the bodies are buried?[*]

What if someone joins our group who does know that all the bodies are French or German, but doesn’t know where any of them are? Does the group then know where all the bodies are buried? It might be surprising that we come to know where all the bodies are buried by being joined by a person who doesn’t know where any of the bodies are buried, but that seems to be the case.

_The Ignorant_
Go back to the restaurant case, and assume we made it to the bar. The group now expands to include George. And George insists at great length that the restaurant is north of the bar, even though Andy is insistent that it is south of the bar. Some of the group believes Andy, though a few are made hesitant. Does the group know where the restaurant is?

_The Unhelpful_
Much as we’d like to go to the restaurant, where we really want to go is the money-tree – the place where they give you money for simply walking in the door. George knows where the money-tree is, but he won’t tell this to any of us? Does the group know where the money-tree is?

Back in the real world, Andy and I were thinking about such cases, because we thought about writing about what it takes for a group to know something. Of course we probably have the kind of intuitions you only get from only ever talking about knowledge late night at philosophy conferences, and we don’t know that much about the existing literature. (We each know the literature backwards, but since we won’t talk about any of it _we_ don’t know what it says. Well, not really, but we’re interested in whether that is possible.) But we plan to have fun making it all up as we go along.

[*] There’s an ambiguity here that I should clear up. X knows where all the bodies are buried is ambiguous between the following two meanings.

1. For each body, X knows where it is buried.
2. X knows the universal proposition _All the bodies are buried here, here, … and here_.

I always mean 2 in what’s above. Here’s a useful heuristic for knowing that it’s 2 that’s being used. Say I’m worried about Andy finding the bodies. I’ve secured all the sites where I know bodies are buried. It turns out that’s all the sites, because I meet condition 1 here. But I’m still worried about Andy finding some buried bodies. Why? Because I don’t know where all the bodies are buried. I think that’s a good explanation, but it relies on the _second_ reading of _knows where all the bodies are buried_.

Jonathan Sutton’s Book

“Jonathan Sutton”:http://faculty.smu.edu/jsutton/ has posted a manuscript of his book defending the claim that knowledge is justified true belief.

bq. “Without Justification”:http://faculty.smu.edu/jsutton/wholebook.pdf

If you as much as glance at the book you’ll see that while my little summary of the view is true, it’s about as cooperative as saying that Rhode Island isn’t the largest state. But no one reading this blog would take my word over the original source … I hope!

I hadn’t put all these facts together before, but SMU must be a pretty good place for talking about epistemology between Sutton and Mark Heller and Robert Howell.

Just to keep up my little campaign of promoting online books going, let me remind you of the other books I’ve plugged here before.

bq. Alva NoĆ«, “Action in Perception”:http://ist-socrates.berkeley.edu/~noe/action.html
Mark Kalderon, “Moral Fictionalsm”:http://www.kalderon.demon.co.uk/research.htm (scroll down for the chapters)

And if you want other book length bits of philosophy, you could always read some of the online dissertations. Here’s a couple of the more talked about dissertations of recent years that happen to both be available online.

bq. Carolina Sartorio, “The Causal and the Moral”:http://philosophy.wisc.edu/sartorio/final.pdf
Cian Dorr, “The Simplicity of Everything”:http://www.pitt.edu/~csd6/SimplicityOfEverything.pdf