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8th Symposium on Logic and Language Short Title: LoLa8 Date: 26-Aug-2004 - 28-Aug-2004 Location: Debrecen, Hungary Contact: Gyorgy Rakosi Contact Email: lola8Mail to author|Respond to list|Read more issues|LINGUIST home page|Top of issuelola8.unideb.hu Meeting URL: http://lola8.unideb.hu Linguistic Sub-field: General Linguistics Meeting Description: The Eighth Symposium on Logic and Language will be held in Debrecen from 26th to 29th of August, 2004. The Symposium is organised by the Linguistics Department and the Philosophy Department of the University of Debrecen, in conjunction with the Research Institute for Linguistics of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences (Budapest). The 2004 forum is the eighth instalment of the Logic and Language Symposium series, which is designed to provide a forum where logicians and linguists meet to share and discuss current issues concerning how theories of linguistics and logic influence each other, with the aim of promoting a fruitful cooperation. Preceding symposiums took place in Debrecen (1987), Hajduszoboszlo (1989), Revfulop (1990), Budapest (1992), Noszvaj (1994), Budapest (1998) and Pecs (2002). The importance of the notion of context is widely acknowledged, even if to varying degrees, among pursuers of theories of natural as well as of formal languages. The very same word ''context'' often refers to quite heterogeneous sets of intuitions, which is obviously reflected in the corresponding formalisms. The aim of the Symposium is to analyse, compare and discuss a wide range of problems which are (directly or indirectly) related to the proper treatment of contextuality both in logic and in linguistics. We envisage a meeting with invited keynote speakers and a restricted number of papers from logicians, linguists, philosophers and computer scientists working on the formalization of contexts and the use of context in applications. In general, we hope to promote a discussion on how to recognize, acquire and represent contextual information as well as on the interplay between particular formalisms and the contextual information they aim to capture. We also welcome contributions concerning related areas of the description of languages. There exist various logics of context and it is a matter of constant discussion to what extent we need reference to context in approaches to information content, information structure, logically relevant sense, intensionality, dynamicity, valid inference, the proof theoretic handling of free variables, etc. On the linguistics side, an adequate semantic or syntactic account of a wide range of empirical phenomena, such as anaphora, tense, aspectuality, topichood, focushood, contrastivity, etc. heavily depends on the use and inclusion of different types of contextual information. The study of these specific domains might help to develop a fuller understanding of the notion of context. THE PROGRAM OF THE EIGHTH SYMPOSIUM ON LOGIC AND LANGUAGE SYMPOSIUM DATE: 26-28 AUGUST, 2004 SYMPOSIUM VENUE: DEBRECEN, HUNGARY REGISTRATION PERIOD: UNTIL 15 AUGUST, 2004 Please consult our website for further info and updates: http://lola8.unideb.hu 26 AUGUST, THURSDAY 8:30 - 8:40 opening remarks 8:40 - 9:50 PAUL DEKKER (University of Amsterdam) Contexts for questions 9:50 - 10:40 M�RTA MALECZKI (University of Szeged) The logical analysis of thetic judgements 10:40 - 11:00 coffee break 11:00 - 12:10 CLEO CONDORAVDI (Palo Alto Research Center & Stanford University) Counterfactual implications 12:10 - 12:45 STEFAN KAUFMANN, ERICA WINSTON & DEBORAH ZUTTY (Northwestern University) Local and global interpretation of conditionals 12:45 - 14:00 lunch break 14:00 - 17:00 TANYA REINHART (Utrecht Institute of Linguistics & Tel Aviv University) OLGA BORIK (New University of Russia, Moscow) Tense, aspect and perfectivity 17:00 - 17:15 coffee break 17:15 - 18:05 G�BOR ALBERTI (University of P�cs & Research Institute for Linguistics of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest) ReAL Interpretation System 18:05 - 18:40 LOUISE VIGEANT (Cornell University) Nominal restriction theory and the problem with ''any'' 19:30 Reception 27 AUGUST, FRIDAY 8:45 - 9:55 KATALIN �. KISS (Research Institute for Linguistics of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest) Identificational focus and information focus revisited 9:55 - 10:45 L�SZL� K�LM�N (University of Budapest) �GI KURUCZ (King's College, London) MIKL�S ERD�LYI-SZAB� (Alfr�d R�nyi Institute for Mathematics of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest) Propositional logic for natural language semantics 10:45 - 11:00 coffee break 11:00 - 11:50 JAN VAN EIJCK (Centre for Mathematics and Computer Science, Amsterdam & University of Utrecht) Modelling informative actions 11:50 - 12:25 C. ANTHONY ANDERSON (University of California, Santa Barbara) Quantified modality in the logic of sense and denotation 12:25 - 13:50 lunch break 13:50 - 14:40 CHRISTOPHER PINON (Research Institute for Linguistics of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest) Weak and strong accomplishments 14:40 - 15:15 ANIK� CSIRMAZ (MIT & Research Institute for Linguistics of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest) Aspect and aspect change crosslinguistically 15:15 - 15:50 BARBARA SONNENHAUSER (Universitaet Leipzig) Linguistic underspecification - the case of Russian imperfective aspect 15:50 - 16:25 GERGELY PETH� (HAS-UD Theoretical Linguistics Research Group, Debrecen) Type coercion and the argument structure of aspectual verbs 17:00 Excursion to Hortob�gy and dinner at Tuba-tanya 28 AUGUST, SATURDAY 9:00 - 10:10 CHRIS FOX (University of Essex) SHALOM LAPPIN (King's College, London) Generating underspecified interpretations as terms of the representation language 10:10 - 11:20 ROBERT VAN ROOIJ (University of Amsterdam) Language use and language structure 11:20 - 11:40 coffee break 11:40 - 12:40 TAM�S MIH�LYDE�K (University of Debrecen) Frege-Husserl triad and functor-argument decomposition 12:40 - 13:15 RICHARD ZUBER (CNRS, Paris) Some remarks on syncategorematicity 13:15 - 14:30 lunch break 14:30 - 15:20 HENK VAN RIEMSDIJK (Tilburg University) About aboutness in relatives 15:20 - 15:55 HANS-MARTIN GAERTNER (Zentrum f�r Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft, Berlin) Relatively accessible: On the anaphoric treatment of relative(-like) constructions 15:55 - 16:30 ANCA SEVCENCO (Utrecht Institute of Linguistics) Long distance Romanian anaphors and the Blocking effect Alternates: 1. KASZA ILDIK� (University of Szeged) Hungarian is ('also') as a contextual operator 2. DANIEL WEDGWOOD (University of Edinburgh) Putting semantic properties in context (and getting procedures in focus)