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Herbert Paul Grice (March 13, 1913, Birmingham, England - August 28, 1988, Berkeley, California), usually publishing under the name Paul Grice, was a British-educated philosopher of language, who spent the final two decades of his career in the U.S.
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Born and raised in the United Kingdom, Grice was educated first at Clifton College and then at Oxford University. After brief period teaching at Rossall he went back to Oxford where he taught until 1967. In that year, he moved to the United States to take up a professorship at the University of California, Berkeley, where he taught until his death in 1988. He returned to the UK in 1979 to give the John Locke lectures on Aspects of Reason. He reprinted many of his essays and papers in his valedictory book, Studies in the Way of Words (1989).
He was married and had two children. He and his wife lived in an old Spanish style house in the Berkeley Hills.
Grice\'s work is one of the foundations of the modern study of pragmatics.
Grice is remembered mainly for his contributions to the study of speaker meaning, linguistic meaning, and (several of) the interrelations between these two phenomena. He provided, and developed, an analysis of the notion of linguistic meaning in terms of speaker meaning (according to his initial suggestion, \'A meant something by x\' is roughly equivalent to \'A uttered x with the intention of inducing a belief by means of the recognition of this intention\'). In order to explain how non-literal utterances can be understood, he further postulated the existence of a general cooperative principle in conversation, as well as of certain special maxims of conversation derived from the cooperative principle. In order to describe certain inferences for which the word "implication" would appear to be inappropriate, he introduced the notion of (several kinds of) implicatures.
Grice understood "meaning" to refer to two rather different kinds of phenomena. Natural meaning is supposed to capture something similar to the relation between cause and effect as, for example, applied in the sentence "Those spots mean measles". This must be distinguished from what Grice calls non-natural meaning, as present in "Those three rings on the bell (of the bus) mean that the bus is full". Grice\'s subsequent suggestion is that the notion of non-natural meaning should be analysed in terms of speakers\' intentions in trying to communicate something to an audience.
In the course of his investigation of speaker meaning and linguistic meaning, Grice introduced a number of interesting distinctions. For example, he distinguished between four kinds of content: encoded / non-encoded content and truth-conditional / non-truth-conditional content.
Sometimes, expressions do not have a literal interpretation, or they do not have any truth-conditional content, and sometimes expressions can have both truth-conditional content and encoded content.
For Grice, these distinctions can explain at least three different possible varieties of expression:
Maxim of Quality: Truth
Maxim of Quantity: Information
Maxim of Relation: Relevance
Maxim of Manner: Clarity
The relevance theory of Dan Sperber and Deirdre Wilson challenges Grice\'s theory of meaning. See Relevance: Communication and Cognition Blackwell, 1986. Grice\'s work is examined in detail by Stephen Neale "Paul Grice and the Philosophy of Language" Linguistics and Philosophy 1992.
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