•  6
    Processing Meaning
    with J. Sedivy, R. Carston, and I. A. Noveck
    Journal of Semantics 24 (4): 305-306. 2007.
  •  15
    Conditional sentences with quantifying expressions are systematically ambigous. In one reading, the if -clause restricts the domain of the overt quantifier; in the other, the if -clause restricts the domain of a covert quantifier, which defaults to epistemic necessity. Although the ambiguity follows directly from the Lewis- Kratzer line on if, it is not generally acknowledged, which has led to pseudoproblems and spurious arguments.
  •  67
    Discourse representation theory
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2008.
  •  44
    When “All the Five Circles” are Four: New Exercises in Domain Restriction
    with Bob van Tiel
    Topoi 35 (1): 109-122. 2016.
    The domain of a quantifier is determined by a variety of factors, which broadly speaking fall into two types. On the one hand, the context of utterance plays a role: if the focus of attention is on a particular collection of kangaroos, for example, then “Q kangaroos” is likely to range over the individuals in that set. On the other hand, the utterance itself will help to establish the quantificational domain, inter alia through presuppositions triggered within the sentence. In this paper, we con…Read more