[lit-ideas] Re: As Soon As Possible: The Implicature

  • From: Omar Kusturica <omarkusto@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: "lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx" <lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Sun, 9 Mar 2014 07:23:33 -0700 (PDT)

What could be objected to "I'll return it as possible" is that it does not 
specify the time when this will happen or the conditions that would make it 
possible to happen, thus it is not much of a 'falsifiable prediction.'

O.K.



On Sunday, March 9, 2014 3:12 PM, Omar Kusturica <omarkusto@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
 
There is no need to replace 'possible' by any other word here, only to 
interpret it in its more common sense of contingent possibility instead of in 
the less common sense of logical possibility.

O.K.



On Sunday, March 9, 2014 11:41 AM, "Jlsperanza@xxxxxxx" <Jlsperanza@xxxxxxx> 
wrote:
 
We are considering the otiose implicatures behind the most colloquial  
("Valley-style") -- and irritating to some -- uses of 'as soon as  possible'.

In a message dated 3/9/2014 6:20:08 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
donalmcevoyuk@xxxxxxxxxxx writes:
The term "possible" is not here the  "possible" of logic [logically 
possible etc], but a synonym for 'practicable'.  And 'practicable' itself is a 
term 
that may be shorthand for a wide range of  considerations.
The other aspect of this argument is no more serious than  this:
A: I'll finish doing it when I
 can.
B: Of course. You can't finish  doing it when you cannot.
Here B may be thought to have not made a  wonderrfully witty remark but 
rather taken "can" in a sense different to A's  meaning.

McEvoy is then considering the replacement of the 'p' in the well-known  
acronym, 'asap', to have the 'p' read as 'practicable'.

"as soon as praticable"

which, as he notes, is "shorthand for a wide range of considerations" --  
but wonder under which of these it does NOT violate a Griceian requirement 
for  efficiency in conversation. "As soon as possible" I would NOT be 
surprised if is  listed, by those authors of manuals on "English Usage" as an 
'otiosity' (as  Geary calls them) or redundancy (alla 'rules and regulations' 
or 
'needless to  say', or 'couldn't care not less').

The retort (if that's the word to McEvoy's other example):

"You cannot
 finish doing something when you cannot"

seems analytic in nature, not too different from Horatio Nelson's famous  
(if otiose) remark: An Englishman should do his duty. Or not.

One possible refutation of McEvoy's idea that 'possible' is a misnomer for  
'practicable' is to find contexts where 'as soon as possible' applies to 
items  that are beyond human intentionality and agency.

The sun will rise as soon as possible.

This missing plane should be found as soon as possible.

Spring should come as soon as possible.

As soon as possible is never too soon.

As soon as possible is never soon enough.

-- Another course of action (that Geary recommends) is to start using 'as  
soon as impossible' just to tease what he calls his 'interlocutor'.

Or not.

Popper may have a say on the matter. Compare the use of 'a.s.a.p' in  
Newton's graviational
 theory (refuted by Einstein, but still part of what McEvoy  
calls 'false knowledge'):

The apple should reach the ground as soon as possible (An application of F  
= G M1 M2/d2. where F is the gravitational force; M1 and M2 are the masses 
of  two particles -- e.g. an apple and the earth --; d is their distance). 

Note that we may need a subscript here: 1 and 2.

Thus a letter exchange should go:

Sir,
You should comply with this as soon as possible-1
     Tom

---

Dear Jerry,
Surely. As soon as possible-2 I will.

It may be argued that Tom's and Jerry's conceptions of 'possible' (surely  
not of 'soon') differ. Or not.

Cheers,

Speranza




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