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- | Kapitel kaufen Titelei1
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- | Kapitel kaufen Beiträge aus Forschung und Anwendung3
- | Kapitel kaufen Pragmatik3
- | Kapitel kaufen Jörg Meibauer: Bullshit als pragmatische Kategorie3
- | Kapitel kaufen Psycholinguistik29
- | Kapitel kaufen Eva Wittenberg: Paradigmenspezifische Effekte subtiler semantischer Manipulationen 29
- | Kapitel kaufen Semantik45
- | Kapitel kaufen Carsten Breul: Zu Artikeln und dem logisch-semantischen Typ von Nomina45
- | Kapitel kaufen Phonologie73
- | Kapitel kaufen Markus Tönjes: „Desblö Socksge! Merim sedie Destänum!“ – Was uns Gaunab der 99. über den Wortakzent des Deutschen verrät73
- | Kapitel kaufen Rezension109
- | Kapitel kaufen Silvia Hansen-Schirra: Malmkjær, Kirsten & Windle, Kevin: Oxford Handbook of Translation Studies109
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Beschreibung
This paper addresses the question whether “bullshit” is a reasonable pragmatic category. Drawing on insights of Harry Frankfurt's seminal essay On Bullshit (2005), bullshit is defined as an act of insincere asserting where the speaker shows (a) a loose concern for the truth, (b) does not want the addressee to become aware of condition (a), and (c) expresses more certainty than is adequate with respect to condition (a). This approach is illustrated with several examples of putative pieces of bullshit. Potential counter-arguments against the spirit of Frankfurt's approach ventured by Carson (2010) are refuted. The paper points out that condition (c) may have to do with humorous effects of bullshit. Furthermore, it is argued that Colin McGinn's notion of “mindfucking”, as developed in his Mindfucking: A Critique of Mental Manipulation (2008) does not lend itself easily to a speech act analysis in analogy to bullshit.
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