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The present work adopts a derivational, incremental, phase-based theory of syntax, with the elementary operation Merge at its center, as it has been developed by Chomsky and others within the minimalist program. Against this background, the main goal of this monograph is to develop an approach to the syntax of German that also envisages another primitive operation Remove that is a complete mirror image of Merge: Whereas Merge brings about structure building (both in the form of basic phrase structure generation, and in the form of movement), Remove leads to an elimination of structure. Merge and Remove obey the same constraints, among them the Strict Cycle Condition.
This short chapter focusses on general concepts involved in Remove-based analyses: conflicting structure assignments, short life cycle effects, and displacement without movement. In addition, it illustrates how the new approach may ultimately reconcile the seemingly incompatible trends towards simpler syntactic representations, on the one hand, and highly complex cartographic representations, on the other.
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