Abstract
Conditional utterances can be used in discourse as answers to regular, non-conditional questions in situations of partial knowledge of the answerer. We claim that the probabilities assigned to possible epistemic states of A are a measure of the utility of conditional answers. A second criterion that makes a conditional answer ‘if p, then q’ relevant has to do with the dependency between p and q that is conveyed in the statement. A conditional answer counts as relevant when this dependency leads the question asker to shift from a decision problem about q to an alternative, easier, decision problem about p.
Original language | English |
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Pages | 26-33 |
Publication status | Published - 2020 |
Event | Probability and Meaning 2020 - Duration: 14 Oct 2020 → 15 Oct 2020 |
Conference
Conference | Probability and Meaning 2020 |
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Period | 14/10/20 → 15/10/20 |