I have been blogging here at Faculty of Language now for a little over 6 months. An unexpected
pleasure has come from reading the comments. Most have been cogent and
provocative, and even when I did not fully agree with the point advanced, I
found it helpful to think through (at least in part) what background
assumptions motivated the comment and how these related to what I tend to hold
true (or true enough to explore).
However, the real pleasure has come not from these edifying remarks.
Some (in the logical sense of ‘at least one’) commentators have granted me a
new discovery: there exists a very robust new rule of inference that seems as
natural to some as their accents – modus
non sequitur (MNS). MNS has the
intriguing form first theoretically identified by Sid Morgenbesser over 35 years ago; if P why not Q. This is a very powerful argument form,
licensing any conclusion from any set of premises. Furthermore, it provides all
the structure needed for vigorous comment.
Masters of this principle of reasoning can go on (seemingly) forever
tying apparently inconsistent propositions together into a marvelous colorful
skein of mangled thought. Magical
realist literature has more logical glue than these productions, and, for sheer
entertainment value, I cannot recommend them highly enough. Fortunately, those
blessed with this turn of mind feel it is an almost holy obligation to weigh in
on most every topic at great length, spreading joyful confusion all
around. I had hoped this blog would
promote reasoned discussion of topics central to contemporary Generative
Grammar. I did not expect it to also
showcase some of the finest examples of contemporary stream of consciousness
“thought.” So thanks: both to the thoughtful and, especially, to the
entertaining. The former for making me think and the latter for making me laugh
and laugh and laugh. Thx.
Why would anyone come up with a mode of argumentation which you refer to as "modus non sequitur" in a hallowed tongue? One obvious reason seems to be that your entertaining commentator doesn't agree with your premises. If you set the rules and insist that everyone play the game by your rules and aggressively put down questions about the rules themselves, then the field will remain to be populated by people of a certain type, where people with other "accents" will stop playing. Good luck.. please carry on with your game.
ReplyDelete