***
2. A
list of some of the effects GG has discovered
The LK story is one of many that GGers have told over the
last 60 years. Here is a partial list of
some of the effects that are still widely investigated (both theoretically and
empirically) within GG research. Some of these effects can be considered
analogous to “laws of grammatical structure” which serve as probes into the
inner workings of FL. As in the case of
LK’s binding proposal, the effects comprise both negative and positive data and
they have served as explanatory targets (and benchmarks) for theories of FL.
These effects also illustrate another distinguishing mark of
an emerging science. In the successful sciences, most of the data is carefully constructed,
not casually observed. In this sense, it
is not “natural” at all, but factitious.
The effects enumerated here are similar. They are not thick on the
conversational ground. Many of these effects concentrate on what cannot exist (i.e. negative data). Many are only visible in comparatively
complex linguistic structures and so are only rarely attested in natural speech
or PLD (if at all). Violations of the binding conditions such as John believes himself is intelligent are
never attested outside of technical papers in GG syntax. Thus, in GG (as in
much of physics, chemistry, biology etc.) much of the core data that GG uses to
probe FL is constructed, rather than natural.[1]
To repeat, this is a hallmark of modes of investigation that have made the leap
from naturalistic observation to scientific explanation. The kinds of data that
drive GG work is of this constructed kind.[2]
Here, then is a partial list of some of the more important
effects that GG has discovered.
1. Island
effects (Ross)
a. Weak Island effects
b. Strong Island effects
2. Cross
Over effects (Postal)
3.
Control vs Raising effects (Rosenbaum)
4. Minimal
Distance effects in control configurations (Rosenbaum)
5.
Binding effects (Lees and Klima, Lasnik, Chomsky)
-A-effects
-B-effects
6.
Cyclicity effects (Kayne&Pollock, McCloskey, Chomsky)
7. Principle
C-effects: an anaphoric element cannot c-command its antecedent (Lees and
Klima, Chomsky)
8. CED
effects (Huang)
a. Subject condition effects
b. Adjunct condition effects
9. Fixed
subject effects (Perlmutter, Bresnan)
10.
Unaccusativity Effects (Perlmutter, Postal, Burzio, Rizzi)
11.
Connectedness effects (Higgins)
12.
Obligatory control vs non obligatory control effects (Williams)
13. The
subject orientation of long distance anaphors (? Huang)
14. Case
effects (e.g. *John to leave inspired Mary)
15.
Theta Criterion effects (e.g. *Who did John kiss Mary)
16. NPI
licensing effects (Linebarger, Ladusaw)
17.
Phrasal Headedness Effects (Lyons, Chomsky, Stowell, Marantz)
18.
Clause-mate effects (Postal)
19.
Expletive-Associate Locality effects (Milsark, Chomsky)
20.
Parasitic gap effects (Engdahl, Chomsky)
21. pro
drop effects (Perlmutter, Rizzi)
22. ECP
effects (Lasnik&Saito, Rizzi, Chomsky, Huang, Kayne)
23.
Weakest Cross Over effects (Lasnik and Stowell)
24. Coordinate
Structure Constraint
a. ATB effects (systematic
exceptions to CSC)
25.
Ellipsis effects (Ross, Merchant, Lasnik, systematic exceptions to island
effects)
26. A-movement/scrambling
obviating WCO effects (Postal, Saito)
27.
Intervention/minimality effects (Rizzi, Cinque, Starke)
28. Constituency effects
29. Scope Reconstruction effects
30. Lexical Integrity Effects
31. Psych verb effects (Belletti and Rizzi)
32. Double Object Construction effects (Barss & Lasnik)
As in the case of the LK binding proposal outlined above,
just describing these effects involves postulating rules and structures to NL
expressions. Thus, each effect comes together with sets of positive and negative
examples and rules/restrictions that describe these data. As in any scientific domain, simply
describing the effects already requires quite a bit of theoretical apparatus
(e.g. what’s an island, what’s a deletion rule, what’s the difference between A
and A’ movement, what’s case, what’s a clause etc.). And, as is true elsewhere,
the discovery of these effects sets the stage for the next stage of inquiry:
explaining them and seeing what these explanations can tell us about the
structure of FL.
[2]
Constructed data are generally more robust than naturalistic data, as
Cartwright observes. Furthermore, it
allows for investigations to be more systematic by allowing researchers to put
their own questions to nature and make her answer these rather than simply
waiting until nature voluntarily gives up her secrets.
For NPI licensing effects, also add Klima and Fauconnier.
ReplyDeletePerhaps structure preserving transformations and auxiliary placement rules (Emonds) also belong on this list.
ReplyDeleteAlso, differential properties of different nominalization processes (Chomsky), and more generally of different alternations (causative/anticausative/unaccusative/unergative...) perhaps.
ReplyDelete