Chair: Nicholas Shea
Résumé
Discourse referents are "mental files" insofar as they are mental representations that function like variables: they architecturally separate addresses from contents. I argue for a construal of discourse referents in which they are not mental files in other respects. First, discourse referents are not addressed by sortal, kind, or noun-type descriptive information; consequently, they cannot account for developmental phenomena such as Mutual Exclusivity. Second, unlike mental files, discourse referents are components of the grammatical system rather than the general belief system. Third, unlike mental files, discourse referents cannot be merged or linked via identity statements.