Language and Conceptualization
To what extent is conceptualization based on linguistic representation? And to what extent is it variable across cultures, communities or even individuals? Of crucial importance in the attempt to develop a comprehensive theory of human cognition, these remain among the most difficult questions in the cognitive sciences. This volume brings together ten new contributions from leading scholars working in a wide cross section of disciplines, including linguistics, anthropology, psychology and philosophy.
- Relationship between language and thought a hot topic
- Strong line-up of contributors
- Interdisciplinary interest (as much anthropology and psychology as linguistics)
Reviews & endorsements
"I recommend this book to anthropologists interested in language or cognition. ...all of the chapters provide succinct statements of general theory, detailed ethnographic observations, or interesting experimental results." Gary B. Palmer, American Anthropologist
"...the book is of interest to anthropological linguists interested in the relavance of our work to cognitive science." Malcah Yaeger-Dror, Language in Society
Product details
May 2000Paperback
9780521774819
292 pages
229 × 153 × 20 mm
0.47kg
27 b/w illus. 1 map 7 tables
Available
Table of Contents
- 1. Overview: on the relationship between language and conceptualization Eric Pederson and Jan Nuyts
- 2. From outer to inner space: linguistic categories and non-linguistic thinking Stephen C. Levinson
- 3. Spatial operations in deixis, cognition and culture: where to orient oneself in Behlare Balthasar Bickel
- 4. Remote worlds: the conceptual representation of linguistic world Paul Werth
- 5. Role and individual interpretations of change predicates Eve Sweetser
- 6. Changing place in English and German: language-specific preferences in the conceptualisation of spatial relations Mary Carroll
- 7. Mapping conceptual representations into linguistic representations: the role of attention in grammar Russell S. Tomlin
- 8. Growth points cross-linguistically David McNeill
- 9. On the modularity of sentence processing: semantical generality and the language of thought Jay David Atlas
- 10. The contextual basis of cognitive semantics Ronald W. Langacker
- 11. The cognitive foundations of pragmatic principles: implications for theories of linguistic and cognitive representation Edward A. Robinson.