Sunday 29 January 2017

The Argument For A Single Integrated Representation Of Structure

Fawcett (2010: xxii):
To express matters in this way seems at first sight to provide a neat way to reconcile the two models of structure. To my considerable regret, however, I have to point out that this is not what I am proposing. This is because, once one recognises the need for this final type of representation, it leads on to further questions. If this final integrated representation is required — as it undoubtedly is — we have to ask questions such as:
1 What is the status in the theory of the intermediate 'multiple structure' representations of clauses in IFG?
2 Do they represent some sort of 'intermediate' structure between the representation in terms of systemic features and the final integrated representation? 
3 If so, are the 'multiple structures' needed at all? 
If the answer to the third question is "Yes", so that 'multiple structures' of the type shown in IFG are indeed to be treated as an integral part of the model of language, this entails the addition to the model of a new component. Its function would be to convert the 'multiple structure' type of representation into a single representation. But this leads in turn to further questions, such as:
4 Is such component used in the computer implementations of Halliday's theory, e.g., is it described in Matthiessen & Bateman (1991)? 
5 Is there any indication anywhere else in the literature of SFL as to what this component would be like? Indeed, we must also ask: 
6 Is there, in fact, any way in which it is possible to 'integrate' several different structures (as opposed to integrating their elements, which is already standard practice in the theory)?
Chapter 7 asks these questions, provides the answers, and then discusses the implications of these answers for the theory. 

Blogger Comments:

[1] Still no argument has been provided as to why the three complementary function structures need to be integrated into a single syntactic structure.  It has merely been asserted to be true.  This is a version of the logical fallacy known as proof by assertion.

[2] This unsupported claim is presented as both:
  • a motivation for these series of questions (see previous critique), and 
  • one of the questions that logically follow from itself.
This is a version of the logical fallacy known as circular reasoning (circulus in probando) or begging the question (petitio principii).

[3] Here Fawcett criticises his colleagues for not having done what he has not demonstrated needs to be done.

Sunday 22 January 2017

Misrepresenting Halliday On Structure

Fawcett (2010: xxi-xxii):
However, I shall also suggest that even a user of Halliday's approach who remains unconvinced by my argument also needs the set of concepts proposed here [author's bolding] (or a fairly similar set). This statement is likely to come as a surprise to many readers, i.e., to those who are familiar with Halliday's proposals for representing the structure of a clause by a set of several different structures — proposals which have not until now been publicly questioned by other systemic linguists. The reason why Halliday's model needs to incorporate the concepts proposed here is that his current structural representations in IFG and elsewhere are not, as he himself would agree, the final stage in the process of generation in his framework, but an intermediate one. In the final stage, the five or more different structures that he distinguishes must be integrated into a single representation [author's bolding]. And it is this integration into a single structure that the theory of syntax presented here provides.

Blogger Comment:

The claims here are that
  • the metafunctional clause structures are only intermediate, because their final stage must be one single integrated representation, and that
  • Halliday would agree with this.
Both these claims are untrue.  The metafunctions are at the heart of SFL theory, and represent important complementary perspectives on the function of language.  Halliday & Matthiessen (2014: 74):
The clause, as we said, is the mainspring of grammatical energy; it is the unit where meanings of different kinds, experiential, interpersonal and textual, are integrated into a single syntagm.
Significantly, Fawcett provides
  • no reasons as to why one single integrated representation is required — merely claiming Halliday's agreement with him as an endorsement — and 
  • no cited evidence in support of what he claims to be Halliday's viewpoint.
Moreover, the use of the claim that Halliday would agree, as part of the argument, is a version of the logical fallacy known as appeal to authority.

Sunday 15 January 2017

Misrepresenting SFL Community Opinion On Structural Representation

Fawcett (2010: xviii, xxi):
Indeed, it is one of the most surprising facts about SFL that, after forty years of fairly widespread use in various fields of application, there is no general agreement as to how best to represent the structure of language at the level of form. This book makes clear proposals for a (partly) new theory of syntax, and in particular for the replacement of the method of representing structure that is used in Halliday's Introduction to Functional Grammar (1994) by a simpler method. Moreover, the new theory of syntax is one that is equally relevant, I shall argue, to a model of language in which Halliday's current representations are retained. … 
In what I have said so far, I have been writing as if the theory of syntax to be presented here is an alternative [author's bolding] to Halliday's approach to structure. And this is indeed what it is, in that the method of representing the syntax of a text-sentence to be described here is ultimately an alternative to his 'multiple structure' method rather than a complement to it.


Blogger Comments:

[1] This is neither surprising, nor a fact.  In a functional theory of language, structure is labelled in terms of function, not form.  Form is accounted for in SFL by the rank scale.  The relation between function and form is realisation — the intensive identifying relation of symbolic abstraction.  An element of function structure at a higher rank is realised by a class of form at the rank below (except in the case of rank-shift).  For example, a Senser, as an element of function structure at the rank of clause, is congruently realised as a nominal group.

[2] The notion of replacing a functional conception of structure with a formal one is inconsistent with the notion of a functional grammar.

Sunday 8 January 2017

Misrepresenting Halliday: Syntax

Fawcett (2010: xviii):
We shall find that there are also important alternative positions within Halliday's theory, and — most pertinently — that he gives us no adequate statement of a 'theory of syntax' in either of the two major recent publications in which we might expect to find one: his paper "Systemic theory" (1993) and his widely influential Introduction to Functional Grammar (1985, second edition 1994). Moreover, we shall find that this leads us to draw unexpected conclusions about the theoretical status of the representations of clauses in IFG, and so about what a theory of syntax for SFL should be like.

Blogger Comments:

Systemic Functional Linguistic theory, as the name implies, is a theory of language that gives priority to
  • system (paradigmatic axis) over structure (syntagmatic axis), and
  • function over form.
In SFL, grammatical form is construed by the rankscale of
  • clause
  • group/phrase
  • word
  • morpheme
In SFL, a distinction is made between structure (function) and syntagm (form). In the following clause, the theme, mood and transitivity lines of analysis constitute function structures, varying for metafunction, in contrast to the formal syntagm of prepositional phrase ^ nominal group ^ verbal group ^ nominal group that realises the elements of function structure.

in Butler’s view
the Cardiff model
represents
a substantial improvement [on the Sydney account]
Theme: marked
Rheme
Adjunct
Subject
Finite
Predicator
Complement
Resi-
Mood
-due
Angle: viewpoint
Identified Token
Process: relational
Identifier Value
prepositional phrase
nominal group
verbal group
nominal group


Halliday & Matthiessen (2004: 39):
Such a sequence of classes is called a ‘syntagm’. … The significance of such a syntagm is that here it is the realisation of a structure: an organic configuration of elements, which we analyse in functional terms.

Sunday 1 January 2017

Praise For The Cardiff Grammar

Fawcett (2010: xxvi):
But the major landmark was Butler's impressive 2003 survey of the three current "structural-functional" theories of language that he considers most valuable, one of which is SFL. And, significantly, in many sections he provides separate accounts of the proposals of the Sydney and the Cardiff versions of SFL. Then, in his "final assessment", he states: 
In my view the Cardiff model represents a substantial improvement on the Sydney account. [...] There can be no doubt that SFG has lived up to its claim to be a text-oriented theory of language; [...] it has achieved a much wider coverage of English grammar than other approaches, this being especially true of the Cardiff grammar.' (Butler 2003b: 471)