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    What do speakers mean? What do they convey? What do they reveal? How do they invite us to think? Communication exploits conventional rules, deliberate choices, and many other faculties. How? A common answer invokes simple meanings and general ways to reinterpret them, as in H. P. Grice'stheory of conversational implicature. Lepore and Stone show such answers are unsatisfactory. Instead, they argue that language provides diverse tools for making ideas public, and that communication recruits distinct kinds of imagination. The work synthesizes results from across cognitive scienceinto a profoundly new account of meaning in language.
  Ernie Lepore is Board of Governors, Professor of Philosophy and an Acting Director of the Center for Cognitive Science at Rutgers.
  
  Matthew Stone is Associate Professor in the Department of Computer Science and Center for Cognitive Science at Rutgers.
  
  Preface
  
  1: Overview
  
  I: The Landscape of Pragmatic Inference
  
  Introduction to Part I
  
  2: The Gricean Framework
  
  3: The Linguistic Turn
  
  4: The Psychological Turn
  
  II: The Interpretive Effects of Linguistic Rules
  
  Introduction to Part II
  
  5: The Scope of Linguistic Conventions
  
  6: Speech Act Conventions: Indirection and Relevance
  
  7: Presupposition and Anaphora: The Case of Tense and Aspect
  
  8: Information Structure: Intonation and Scalars
  
  Summary of Part II and Projection
  
  III: Varieties of Interpretive Reasoning
  
  Introduction to Part III
  
  9: The Scope of Interpretive Reasoning
  
  10: Perspective Taking: Metaphor
  
  11: Presenting Utterances: Sarcasm, Irony, and Humor
  
  12: Leaving Things Open: Hinting
  
  Summary of Part III and Projection
  
  IV: Theorizing Semantics and Pragmatics
  
  Introduction to Part IV
  
  13: Interpretation and Intention Recognition
  
  14: Inquiry and the Formal Underpinnings of Communication
  
  Conclusion