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Can Construction Grammar Be Proven Wrong?

Can Construction Grammar Be Proven Wrong?

Can Construction Grammar Be Proven Wrong?

Bert Cappelle, Université de Lille and Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Paris
February 2024
Available
Paperback
9781009343206

    Construction Grammar has gained prominence in linguistics, owing its popularity to its inclusive approach that considers language units of varying sizes and generality as potential constructions – mentally stored form-function units. This Element serves as a cautionary note against complacency and dogmatism. It emphasizes the enduring importance of falsifiability as a criterion for scientific hypotheses and theories. Can every postulated construction, in principle, be empirically demonstrated not to exist? As a case study, the author examines the schematic English transitive verb-particle construction, which defies experimental verification. He argues that we can still reject its non-existence using sound linguistic reasoning. But beyond individual constructions, what could be a crucial test for Construction Grammar itself, one that would falsify it as a theory? In making a proposal for such a test, designed to prove that speakers also exhibit pure-form knowledge, this Element contributes to ongoing discussions about Construction Grammar's theoretical foundations.

    Product details

    February 2024
    Paperback
    9781009343206
    82 pages
    230 × 150 × 5 mm
    0.15kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • 1. Introduction: The Stakes
    • 2. Can't Touch This: Does CxG Have an Attitude Problem?
    • 3. Falsificationism: A Still-Influential Approach to Scientific Inquiry
    • 4. The Particular but Generalizable Problem Posed by Particle Verbs
    • 5. How CxG could Play the Science Game Fairly
    • 6. Keep Calm and Constructi-con.
      Author
    • Bert Cappelle , Université de Lille and Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Paris