From the Publisher
Advance Praise: "Mikhail Kissine provides a most comprehensive and compelling case for the study of literal and nonliteral speech acts within a rigorously naturalistic approach. His data and arguments, which challenge theoretical confusions and prevalent assumptions, make up a major breakthrough. From Utterances to Speech Acts is an engaging read, novel and eye-opening – a lucid, evidence-based model of the study of direct and indirect language use among typically and atypically developing individuals." Professor Rachel Giora, Tel Aviv University
"Kissine offers a new theory of speech acts which is philosophically sophisticated and builds on work in cognitive science, formal semantics, and linguistic typology. This highly readable, brilliant essay is a major contribution to the field." François Recanati, Institut Jean-Nicod
"Kissine’s From Utterances to Speech Acts is an original, informed and compelling new contribution to the literature on the nature of speech acts. Kissine provides good reasons to put aside widely accepted Gricean accounts in terms of complex intentions, in part based on up-to-date empirical data. He provides an alternative account, on which speech acts constitutively express reasons (to believe or to act), and develops detailed illustrative accounts of constative, directive and commisive speech acts – paradigmatically including, respectively, assertions, orders and promises. Kissine convincingly argues that his account is compatible with the empirical results that prove problematic for Gricean views, and in general with a naturalistic stance. The book includes many original conceptual proposals – among them, a new take on Austin’s distinction between the locutionary, illocutionary, and perlocutionary acts, and a proposal to replace classifications of illocutionary forces in terms of “direction of fit” by a distinction between two ways of presenting a locutionary content, a potential one – uncommitted to the truth or falsity of the content, applying to orders among speech acts and imaginings or desires among mental acts –, and a non-potential one, applying to beliefs, assertions, intentions and promises. Many of the book’s proposals deserve to be taken up and examined further much more in depth by interested researchers. I believe the book will thus deeply influence the course of forthcoming research on its topics." Manuel García-Carpintero, LOGOS, University of Barcelona