Description

Book Synopsis
This book is an attempt to re-evaluate some basic assumptions about language, communication, and cognition in the light of the new epistemology of autopoiesis as the theory of the living. Starting with a critique of common myths about language and communication, the author goes on to argue for a new understanding of language and cognition as functional adaptive activities in a consensual domain of interactions. He shows that such understanding is, in fact, what marks a variety of theoretical and empirical frameworks in contemporary non-Cartesian cognitive science; thus, cognitive science is in the process of working out new epistemological foundations for the study of language and cognition. In Part Two, the traditional concept of grammar is reassessed from the vantage point of autopoietic epistemology, and an analysis of specific grammatical phenomena in English and Russian is undertaken, revealing common cognitive mechanisms at work in linguistic categories.

Table of Contents
Contents: Myths linguistics lives by – Toward a realistic language science – Autopoiesis and linguistic analysis – Speech, writing, and cognition: whence the communicative dysfunction? – Grammar and cognition – Aspect: where Russian and English meet – Interpreting linguistic structure: how we know who does what when – Nominal gender: a case from Russian.

Biology of Cognition and Linguistic Analysis:

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    A Paperback / softback by Alexander Kravchenko

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      View other formats and editions of Biology of Cognition and Linguistic Analysis: by Alexander Kravchenko

      Publisher: Peter Lang AG
      Publication Date: 15/01/2008
      ISBN13: 9783631566473, 978-3631566473
      ISBN10: 3631566476

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This book is an attempt to re-evaluate some basic assumptions about language, communication, and cognition in the light of the new epistemology of autopoiesis as the theory of the living. Starting with a critique of common myths about language and communication, the author goes on to argue for a new understanding of language and cognition as functional adaptive activities in a consensual domain of interactions. He shows that such understanding is, in fact, what marks a variety of theoretical and empirical frameworks in contemporary non-Cartesian cognitive science; thus, cognitive science is in the process of working out new epistemological foundations for the study of language and cognition. In Part Two, the traditional concept of grammar is reassessed from the vantage point of autopoietic epistemology, and an analysis of specific grammatical phenomena in English and Russian is undertaken, revealing common cognitive mechanisms at work in linguistic categories.

      Table of Contents
      Contents: Myths linguistics lives by – Toward a realistic language science – Autopoiesis and linguistic analysis – Speech, writing, and cognition: whence the communicative dysfunction? – Grammar and cognition – Aspect: where Russian and English meet – Interpreting linguistic structure: how we know who does what when – Nominal gender: a case from Russian.

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