The logic of indirect speech 论文

2008Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences引用 419
Hate Speech and Cyberbullying DetectionExperimental Behavioral Economics StudiesEvolutionary Game Theory and Cooperation

详细信息

发表期刊/会议
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
发表日期
2008-01-17
发表年份
2008

关键词

Hate Speech and Cyberbullying DetectionExperimental Behavioral Economics StudiesEvolutionary Game Theory and Cooperation

摘要

When people speak, they often insinuate their intent indirectly rather than stating it as a bald proposition. Examples include sexual come-ons, veiled threats, polite requests, and concealed bribes. We propose a three-part theory of indirect speech, based on the idea that human communication involves a mixture of cooperation and conflict. First, indirect requests allow for plausible deniability, in which a cooperative listener can accept the request, but an uncooperative one cannot react adversarially to it. This intuition is supported by a game-theoretic model that predicts the costs and benefits to a speaker of direct and indirect requests. Second, language has two functions: to convey information and to negotiate the type of relationship holding between speaker and hearer (in particular, dominance, communality, or reciprocity). The emotional costs of a mismatch in the assumed relationship type can create a need for plausible deniability and, thereby, select for indirectness even when there are no tangible costs. Third, people perceive language as a digital medium, which allows a sentence to generate common knowledge, to propagate a message with high fidelity, and to serve as a reference point in coordination games. This feature makes an indirect request qualitatively different from a direct one even when the speaker and listener can infer each other's intentions with high confidence.