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Searle's felicity conditions for promising (1969)

1.
Normal input and output conditions obtain.
2.
S expresses the proposition that p in the utterance of T.
3.
In expression that p, S predicates a future act A of S.
4.
H would prefer S's doing A to his not doing A, and S believes H would prefer his doing A to his not doing A..
5.
It is not obvious to both S and H that S will do A in the normal course of events.
6.
S intends to do A.
7.
S intends that the utterance of T will place him under an obligation to do A.
8.
S intends (i-1) to produce in H the knowledge (K) that the utterance of T is to count as placing S under an obligation to do A. S intends to produce K by means of the recognition of i-1k, and he intends i-1 to be recognized in virtue of (by means of) H's knowledge of the meaning of T.
9.
The semantical rules of the dialect spoken by S and H are such that T is correctly and sincerely uttered if and only if conditions 1-8 obtain.



Dafydd Gibbon
Wed Oct 21 15:49:14 MET DST 1998