Posts Tagged ‘linguistics’

Scooping the Loop Snooper

Today I’ve just found a great and very strange proof of the halting problem by the famous philosopher and linguist Geoffrey Pullum. It is so simple yet logically accurate. You can also access the original version of this proof from the Geoffrey Pullum’s web page in University of Edinburgh. What makes this proof more interesting [...]

The Basic Semantics of Nominals and Generative Lexicon

Generative Lexicon Generative Lexicon is a computational theory of linguistic semantics that focuses on the nature of compositionality. The theory is firstly proposed by James Pustejovsky in 1991 in his paper titled as “The Generative Lexicon”. The Generative Lexicon has 4 levels: 1. Lexical Typing Structure 2. Argument Structure 3. Event Structure 4. Qualia Structure [...]