Programme C 2001


IS MEANING DYNAMIC

 Programme

 

 

 Tuesday, September 11

 
     
 14.10 

Invited Lecture 

JOHAN VAN BENTHEM (Amsterdam / Stanford):

Dynamics of Meaning

 15.40

Wolfram Hinzen (Regensburg): 

Meaning and Cognitive Architecture

 16.20

Jaroslav Peregrin (Prague):

Dynamic Semantics – A New Paradigm?

     
 

 Wednesday, September  12

 
     
 09.30

Invited Lecture

HANS KAMP (Stuttgart):

Dynamic Semantics and the Dynamics of Discourse

 11.00  Friederike Moltmann (Liverpool):

Presuppositions and the Semantic Dynamic Approach

 11.40  Richard Breheny (Cambridge):

Reflections on the Dynamic Turn in the Study of Language and Meaning

 14.00

Hans Rott (Regensburg):  

Belief Change vs. Meaning Change

 14.40 

Christopher Gauker (Cincinnati): 

Conditionals as Context-Relative Rules of Inference

 15.20 Hiroyuki Nishina (Saitama):

Extracting Semantic Features from Spatio-Temporal Information on Action Using Modal Logic

     
 

 Thursday, September 13

 
     
 09.30        Invited Lecture

GABRIEL SANDU (Helsinki):

Games and Language

 11.00 

Manuel Rebuschi (Nancy): 

A New Chance for Substitution?

 11.40

Louise Vigeant (Ottawa):  

What Would Justify a Verificationist Theory of Meaning?

 14.00       

Anna Sierszulska (Krakow):          

Context Dependence and Compositionality in Theories of Meaning

 14.40 Tero Tulenheimo (Helsinki):

Independence-Friendly Tense Logic and Its Expressive Power

 15.50 Vladimír Svoboda & Timothy Childers (Prague):    

On the Meaning of Prescriptions

 16.30    

Berislav Zarnic (Split):

Dynamic Models, Intentional States and Practical Logic

     
 

 Friday, September 14

 
     
 09.30 Ruth Kempson & Wilfrid Meyer-Viol (London):

Anaphoric Processes of Interpretation and the Growth of Logical Form

 10.10 Klaus von Heusinger (Konstanz):

Double Dynamics: Definite Description

 11.20 Jiří Havelka & Petr Sgall (Prague):

Dynamics in the Meaning of Sentence and of Discourse

 12.00   John Shosky (Washington):          

Meaning and Incrementalism