Max Scheler
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A reply to "I hope you will let Flynn go"

Richard Warner

pp. 577-586

Abstrakt

Capone and Bucca offer a socio-pragmatic analysis of President Trump's utterance, "I hope you will let Flynn go" to show that Trump illicitly tried to persuade Comey to drop the investigation of Flynn. I do not dispute that claim. Instead, I offer an overview of their argument—with one potential point of disagreement. Capone and Bucca assume, As pragmatic investigators typically do, that speakers have determinate intentions and reason in complex ways about how to realize those intentions. I suggest that speakers may not have determinate intentions and may not engage in the complex types of reasoning pragmatics typically attributes to them. I do not suggest that this point undercuts Capone and Bucca's claims; rather, it suggests that their emphasis on a normative component in pragmatic analysis is correct, and suggests that a focus on the normative component supports their claims.

Publication details

Published in:

Capone Alessandro, Carapezza Marco, Lo Piparo Franco (2019) Further advances in pragmatics and philosophy II: theories and applications. Dordrecht, Springer.

Seiten: 577-586

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-00973-1_32

Referenz:

Warner Richard (2019) „A reply to "I hope you will let Flynn go"“, In: A. Capone, Carapezza & F. Lo Piparo (eds.), Further advances in pragmatics and philosophy II, Dordrecht, Springer, 577–586.