Optimality theory and minimalism von Ralf Vogel | A possible convergence? | ISBN 9783939469544

Optimality theory and minimalism

A possible convergence?

von Ralf Vogel und weiteren, herausgegeben von Hans Broekhuis und Ralf Vogel
Mitwirkende
Autor / AutorinRalf Vogel
Autor / AutorinSten Vikner
Autor / AutorinPius ten
Autor / AutorinAlona Soschen
Autor / AutorinHans Broekhuis
Autor / AutorinEva Engels
Autor / AutorinVieri Samek
Autor / AutorinJane Grimshaw
Herausgegeben vonHans Broekhuis
Herausgegeben vonRalf Vogel
Buchcover Optimality theory and minimalism | Ralf Vogel | EAN 9783939469544 | ISBN 3-939469-54-8 | ISBN 978-3-939469-54-4

Optimality theory and minimalism

A possible convergence?

von Ralf Vogel und weiteren, herausgegeben von Hans Broekhuis und Ralf Vogel
Mitwirkende
Autor / AutorinRalf Vogel
Autor / AutorinSten Vikner
Autor / AutorinPius ten
Autor / AutorinAlona Soschen
Autor / AutorinHans Broekhuis
Autor / AutorinEva Engels
Autor / AutorinVieri Samek
Autor / AutorinJane Grimshaw
Herausgegeben vonHans Broekhuis
Herausgegeben vonRalf Vogel
This issue of Linguistics in Potsdam contains a number of papers that grew out of the workshop Descriptive and Empirical Adequacy in Linguistics held in Berlin on December 17-19 December, 2005. One of the goals of this meeting was to bring together scholars working in various frameworks (with emphasis on the Minimalist Program and Optimality Theory) and to discuss matters concerning descriptive and empirical adequacy. Another explicit goal was to discuss the question whether Minimalism and Optimality Theory should be considered incompatible and, hence, competing theories, or whether the two frameworks should rather be considered complementary in certain respects (see http://let. uvt. nl/deal05/call. html for the call for papers). Five of the seven papers in this volume directly grew out of the oral presentations given at the workshop. Although Vieri Samek-Lodovici’s paper was not part of the workshop, it can also be considered a result of the workshop since it pulls together some of his many comments during the discussion time. The paper by Eva Engels and Sten Vikner discusses a phenomenon that received much interest from both minimalist and optimality theoretic syntax in the recent years, Scandinavian object shift. The paper may serve as a practical example for a claim that is repeatedly made in this volume: minimalist and OT analyses, even where they might be competing, can fruitfully inform each other in a constructive manner, leading to a deeper understanding of syntactic phenomena.