The additional power of empirical modes of discourse is that they co-articulate a (semiotically-grounded) 'real' predictively and offer further submodes of discourse that allow such discourses to develop, increasing their range of prediction. That's just called scientific method. It does not claim to be the only way of discoursing, but should be one that SFL can deal in and deal in rather centrally.
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[1] To be clear, the difference between empiricism and rationalism is the relative status each gives to experience and reason, with empiricism identifying experience as the primary source of knowledge, and rationalism reason. On the SFL model, knowledge is meaning, and ideational meaning comprises logical relations (reason) between experiential construals (experience).
[2] To be clear, in SFL theory, modes of discourse are contextual modes (textual metafunction), such as spoken or written, that are realised by registers of language. Empiricism, on the other hand, as an epistemological category, is a contextual field (ideational metafunction) that is realised by registers of language, or, more properly: a "meta-field", since epistemology is concerned with fields of fields, such as those of science or philosophy.
[3] In terms of the textual metafunction, the lexical repetition of 'co-articulate' here links cohesively back — see previous post —to 'co-articulate' in
[4] Here Bateman construes an identity that encodes the additional power of empirical modes of discourse by reference to a fact:
In Peircean terms, the representamen, the interpretant and the object *co-art[i]culate* one another …In interpersonal terms, what this repetition links is the proposition made of the Peircean triad to propositions made of 'empirical modes of discourse' and 'scientific method'. In other words, it uses lexical cohesion to imply a proposition about the Peircean triad with regard to 'empirical modes of discourse' and 'scientific method' without presenting it as an explicit arguable proposition.
[4] Here Bateman construes an identity that encodes the additional power of empirical modes of discourse by reference to a fact:
The additional power of empirical modes of discourse | is | that they co-articulate a (semiotically-grounded) 'real' predictively and offer further submodes of discourse that allow such discourses to develop, increasing their range of prediction |
Identified Value
|
Process: identifying
|
Identifier Token
|
Subject
|
Finite
|
Complement
|
Mood
|
Residue
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The fact itself is realised by a clause complex within which the following relations obtain:
that they
co-articulate a (semiotically-grounded) 'real' predictively
|
and offer
further submodes of discourse that allow such discourses to develop
|
increasing their
range of prediction
|
1
|
+ 2
| |
α
|
= β
|
By embedding these propositions in his fact, Bateman presents them as unarguable. However, they become arguable if they are analysed as ranking clauses. The first of these can be analysed as follows:
empirical modes of discourse
|
co-articulate
|
a (semiotically-grounded) 'real'
|
predictively
| |
Sayer
|
Process: verbal
|
Verbiage
|
Manner: quality
| |
Subject
|
Finite
|
Predicator
|
Complement
|
Adjunct
|
Mood
|
Residue
|
The second proposition can be analysed as follows:
empirical modes of discourse
|
offer
|
further submodes of discourse that allow such
discourses to develop
| |
Identified Token
|
Process: identifying: possessive: benefaction
|
Identifier Value
| |
Subject
|
Finite
|
Predicator
|
Complement
|
Mood
|
Residue
|
Experientially, this construes a benefactive identity that decodes empirical modes of discourse by reference to a Value in which is embedded a further proposition:
further submodes of discourse
|
allow
|
such discourses
|
to develop
| |
Creator
|
Process:
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Existent
|
existential
| |
Initiator
|
Process:
|
Actor
|
material: creative
| |
Subject
|
Finite
|
Pre…
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Complement
|
…dicator
|
Mood
|
Residue
|
The final proposition can be analysed as follows:
offering further submodes of discourse that
allow such discourses to develop
|
increases
|
their range of prediction
| |
Attributor
|
Process: qualitative
|
Carrier
| |
Initiator
|
Process: transformative
|
Actor
| |
Subject
|
Finite
|
Predicator
|
Complement
|
Mood
|
Residue
|
Unsurprisingly, the combination of these abstract construals and unarguable propositions, all realising what is construed as a fact, silenced all Bateman's interlocutors on the matter.
[5] Here Bateman identifies his fact as scientific method:
That
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's
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just
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called
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scientific
method
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Identified Token
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Process:
|
identifying
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Identifier Value
| |
Subject
|
Finite
|
mood Adjunct: intensity: counterexpectancy: limiting
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Predicator
|
Complement
|
Mood
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Residue
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Cf the following dictionary definition:
scientific method: a method of procedure that has characterised natural science since the 17th century, consisting in systematic observation, measurement, and experiment, and the formulation, testing, and modification of hypotheses.
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