TY - JOUR
T1 - Future and Negation
AU - De Florio, Ciro
AU - Frigerio, Aldo
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - In this article, we take into consideration two semantics of the future tense: linearism, according to which future-tense sentences are interpreted on a single history,
and universalism, according to which they are evaluated by universally quantifying
on the plurality of future histories that radiate from the present instant. Specifcally,
we focus on a objection advanced against universalism: if universalism were correct semantics of will, negated future-tense sentences of natural language should
have two readings, depending on the scope of negation with respect to the universal quantifer on histories. However, since natural language does not show this difference, one may conclude that there is no universal quantifer in the interpretation
of these sentences. We show that this conclusion is premature. First, will has clear
scope interactions with indefnite nouns phrases, contrary to what linearism predicts. Second, it is possible to extend the treatment of vague predicates as partial
predicates to will: Since partial predicates have no scope interactions with negation,
this can account for the scopelessness of will. The partiality of truth conditions is
not restricted to will but also pertains to counterfactuals and generics and probably
is part of a general tendency to maximize contraries.
AB - In this article, we take into consideration two semantics of the future tense: linearism, according to which future-tense sentences are interpreted on a single history,
and universalism, according to which they are evaluated by universally quantifying
on the plurality of future histories that radiate from the present instant. Specifcally,
we focus on a objection advanced against universalism: if universalism were correct semantics of will, negated future-tense sentences of natural language should
have two readings, depending on the scope of negation with respect to the universal quantifer on histories. However, since natural language does not show this difference, one may conclude that there is no universal quantifer in the interpretation
of these sentences. We show that this conclusion is premature. First, will has clear
scope interactions with indefnite nouns phrases, contrary to what linearism predicts. Second, it is possible to extend the treatment of vague predicates as partial
predicates to will: Since partial predicates have no scope interactions with negation,
this can account for the scopelessness of will. The partiality of truth conditions is
not restricted to will but also pertains to counterfactuals and generics and probably
is part of a general tendency to maximize contraries.
KW - Future tense semantics
KW - Logic of future sentences
KW - Negation
KW - Open Future
KW - Topology of the future
KW - Future tense semantics
KW - Logic of future sentences
KW - Negation
KW - Open Future
KW - Topology of the future
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/213524
UR - https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10670-022-00603-0
U2 - 10.1007/s10670-022-00603-0
DO - 10.1007/s10670-022-00603-0
M3 - Article
SN - 0165-0106
VL - 89
SP - 1781
EP - 1801
JO - Erkenntnis
JF - Erkenntnis
ER -