Réjean Canac-Marquis: Phases and Binding of Reflexives and Pronouns in English
This paper proposes a distinct approach to local binding effects for reflexives
and pronominals in English whereby the nature of local binding domains is a
by-product of the incremental interpretation of syntactic derivations
(Uriageraka 1999, Chomsky 2000, 2001), emphasizing the role of the
Conceptual /Intentional interface and the computational system (i.e. bare
output conditions) in shaping general principles of grammars. A significant
development of the Minimalist framework is the proposal that derivations
operate through phases or multiple spell outs, which allows to reduce the
strict cyclicity of derivations, and related locality effects of movement, to
interface (bare output) conditions and economy conditions. In this paper I
propose that incremental interpretation can further capture local binding
domains effects of conditions A and B of Chomsky's (1981, 1986) Binding
Theory. Basically, local binding domains are shown to correspond to
accessible phase domains . Our proposal hence contrasts with standard
analyses (e.g. Reinhart and Reuland 1993, Pollard and Sag 1992) that define
co-argumenthood as the core factor from which binding conditions are
developed. Our proposal also provides a new perspective on the core
contrasts between A-chain and A-bar chain w.r.t. binding and scope
reconstruction effects and argues that checking of the uninterpretable feature
Case is what defines potential phase domains.
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Maintained by Stefan Müller
Created: October 15, 2005
Last modified: March 10, 2008
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