The Western classical tradition in linguistics:
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
London [u.a.]
Equinox
2007
|
Ausgabe: | 1. publ. |
Schriftenreihe: | Equinox textbooks and surveys in linguistics
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Table of contents only Klappentext Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XI, 351 S. Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. |
ISBN: | 1904768954 9781904768951 1904768962 9781904768968 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | The Western Classical Tradition in Linguistics
examines ancient, medieval, post-renaissance
and modern conceptions of linguistics (i.e. the
study of language and languages). It identifies a
classical tradition extending from Ancient Greece
to the twenty-first century which has spread from
Europe to the other four inhabited continents.
It is a story of successive stages of language
study, each building upon, or reacting against,
the preceding period. There is a theoretical track
passing through Plato, Aristotle and the Stoics
to the scholastics of the later middle ages, on to
the vernacular grammarians of the renaissance,
then the rationalists and universal grammarians
of the seventeenth, eighteenth and twentieth
centuries. Joining this, is a tradition relating
language to thought handed on from Epicurus
and Lucretius to Locke, Condillac,
Saussure,
cognitivists. There is at the same time a
pedagogical track deriving from the Greek
grammarians Dionysius Thrax and
Dyscolus via the Latins, Donatus, Priscian,
and their commentators; a track that gives
rise to prescriptivism and applied linguistics.
The book s last chapter examines the
re-ascendancy of hypothetico-deductive theory
over the inductivist theories of the early twentieth
century, concluding that both approaches are
necessary for the proper modelling of language
in the twenty-first century and beyond.
Contents
List of Figures x
List of Tables xjj
Preface xiii
Acknowledgments xiv
Symbols and abbreviations used in the text xv
Chapter 1 Linguistics and the Western Classical Tradition 1
Linguistics, language, and languages 1
Viewpoints on language 5
The Western Classical Tradition in linguistics 9
Why no women? 14
Summary introduction to the Western Classical Tradition in linguistics 16
Chapter 2 Plato on language 20
Before Plato 20
Plato on meaning and grammar 25
Plato on the relationship between meaning and form in language 26
Particulars, universals, and abstract objects 32
Plato on meaning, form, and understanding 35
Chapter 3 Aristotle s legacy 36
Aristotle s footprints in the linguist s garden 36
Some basic Aristotelian assumptions 38
Aristotle s parts of speech 40
Aristotle on the phoneme 43
Semantic relations in Aristotle 44
Propositions and their meanings 46
Aristotle and the Gricean maxims 52
A summary of Aristotle s perambulations in the linguistics garden 54
Chapter 4 The Stoics and Varro 56
The third century BCE through to the third century CE 56
The Stoics 56
Varro 65
The development of a linguistic theory 75
viii Contents
Chapter 5 Quintilian, Dionysius, and Donatus: the start of a pedagogic
tradition 77
From philosophy to pedagogy 77
Quintilian 78
The Techne Grammatike of Dionysius Thrax 81
The Artes Grammaticae of Aelius Donatus 90
The parts of speech in the pedagogical tradition 94
Chapter 6 Apollonius and Priscian, the great grammarians among the
ancients 98
Apollonius 98
Priscian 108
Priscian s Institutiones Grammaticae 109
Priscian s De Nomine 119
Priscian s Partitiones 121
A summary of Priscian s contribution 122
Chapter 7 Prescriptivism from the early middle ages on 125
The prescriptivist tradition 125
The early middle ages 127
Isidore of Seville, encyclopaedist 129
The insular grammarians 133
ElfricofEynsham 136
Prescriptivism and standards in English grammar 138
Prescriptive linguistics from the middle ages till modern times 150
Chapter 8 General or universal grammar: from the modistae to
Chomsky 153
The background to general grammar 153
The modistae or speculative grammarians 155
The recognition of vernacular languages 167
The search for a philosophical language and a real character 169
General or universal and rationalist grammar 175
From the modistae to Chomsky 184
Chapter 9 Phonetics, phonology, and comparative philology 188
The nineteenth century 188
A brief history of phonetics and phonology 188
Nineteenth century comparative philology 200
Linguistics at the end of the nineteenth century 214
Contents ix
Chapter 10 Language and thought: from Epicurus until after YVhorf 216
Speculations on the origin of language and linguistic relativity 216
Speculations on the origin of language 216
Humboldt on the mutual influence of language and culture 225
Boas 229
Sapir 231
Whorf 235
From linguistic relativity to cognitive grammar 239
Chapter 11 Saussurcan and functionalist linguistics: the study of language
as human communication 245
Saussure and functionalist!) 245
Saussurean linguistics 245
Functionalist linguistics 254
The study of language as human communication 267
Chapter 12 Paradigms for linguistic analysis: Bloomfieldian linguistics and
the Chomsky revolution 269
The problem of classifying and categorizing data 269
On kinds of inference applicable to linguistic theorizing 271
Bloomfieldian linguistics 275
Chomsky s disillusionment with the inductivist paradigm 284
The Chomsky revolution 286
Correlating theoretical constructs with the reality they purport to represent 288
Evaluating linguistic hypotheses: what a theory of language should do 289
An eclectic approach 294
Coda 296
Epilogue 298
References 299
Index 335
List of Figures
Figure 1.1. King Narmer defeats his enemies 1
Figure 1.2. The Sumerian logograph sag head 2
Figure 1.3. Sumerian c. 3000 BCE 2
Figure 1.4. The complex logograph for Sumerian geme slave-girl 2
Figure 1.5. The/t+vowel syllables of Linear B 3
Figure 1.6. Ptolemy cartouche from the Rosetta Stone 3
Figure 1.7a. Normal right-to-left 3
Figure 1.7b. Left-to-right 3
Figure 1.8. The /I/ graphemes in related scripts 4
Figure 1.9. Semitic ?Slep ox , the symbol for ? comes to be used for A in Greek 4
Figure 1.10. A visual analysis of spoken Sit down will you? 6
Figure 1.11. Smileys 17
Figure 1.12 A map of the ancient world 19
Figure 2.1. The Greek inscription in scripta continua on the Rosetta Stone 20
Figure 2.2. Egyptian demotic papyrus c 1210 BCE 21
Figure 3.1. Apuleius s square of opposition 49
Figure 3.2. The square of opposition again 51
Figure 3.3. The modal square of opposition 51
Figure 4.1. The Stoic semiotic triangle and that of Ogden and Richards 58
Figure 4.2. Categories of the lekton 58
Figure 4.3. Cases falling from the upright 61
Figure 7.1. Europe in the early middle ages 126
Figure 8.1. Compositio 163
Figure 8.2. Types of transitives 164
Figure 8.3. Modistic analysis of Socrates percutit Platonem 164
Figure 8.4. Modistic analysis of Socrates albus currit bene 165
Figure 8.5. Modistic analysis of Video legentem librum 165
Figure 8.6. Wiikins s 40 categories 172
Figure 8.7. Virgil s book 185
Figure 9.1. A vowel diagram constructed from the First Grammatical Treatise 191
Figure 9.2. Hellwag s Vowel Chart of 1781 194
Figure 9.3. Grimm s cycle (Kreislauf) 205
Figure 10.1. Figure and ground change in an ambiguous figure 234
Figure 11.1. The mood system in an early version of systemic grammar 257
List of figures xi
Figure 11.2. A lattice in part of the verbal group complex 258
Figure 11.3. Components of the layered structure of a clause in RRG 260
Figure 11.4. An English sentence 260
Figure U.S. A Japanese question 261
Figure 11.6. English translation of the Dyirbal in Figure 11.7 261
Figure 11.7. Dyirbal translation of the English in Figure 11.6 261
Figure 11.8. Operator projections 262
Figure 11.9. Operator projections: tense and illocutionary force marking 262
Figure 11.10. Operator projection in a Japanese question 263
Figure 11.11. An English NP compared with its Arremte translation 263
Figure 11.12. The syntax, semantics, and pragmatics of What did Dana give to Pat 266
yesterday?
Figure 12.1. Hockett s bottom-up analysis of an English sentence 272
List of Tables
Table 2.1. The three constituents of a letter 22
Table 3.1. The consonant triads 44
Table 3.2. Linguistic correlates for Aristotle s ten categories 45
Table 4.1. The Stoic tense-aspect system 63
Table 4.2. Derivational irregularity 70
Table 4.3. Varro s use of inflectional characteristics to distinguish parts of speech 72
Table 4.4. A restoration of Varro s case-gender matrix 73
Table 4.5. Varro s tense~aspect paradigm 73
Table6.1. Apollonius four categories among the parts of speech 101
Table 6.2. Priscian s four categories among the parts of speech 101
Table 6.3. Graphemic simplification 110
Table 6.4. A morphophonemic rule 110
Table 6.5. Formation rule 1 for the past imperfect 115
Table 6.6. Formation rule 2 for the past imperfect 115
Table 7.1. /tlfric s parts of speech 137
Table 8.1. Modi ens and esse, matter and form 160
Table 8.2. The case of the suppositum 164
Table 9.1. Letters 190
Table 9.2. Table of equivalences between Greek and Latin 203
Table 9.3. Examples of Grimm s law 205
Table 9.4. Consonant correspondences under Grimm s law 205
Table 9.5. Conditions for Verner s Law 211
Table 9.6. Correspondences between PIE and its daughters 211
Table 9.7. Ablaut series in the stems of Greek verbs 212
Table 9.8. Ablaut series in the stems of lexically related words 212
Table 9.9. The primitive vowel system in PIE 212
Table 9.10. Hittite A as a reflex of the PIEIaryngeal 212
Table 11.1. Associative and syntagmatic relations 247
Table 11.2. Scale and category 258
Table 11.3. Word classes and their typical functions in groups 259
Table 11.4. Aspect-based verb classes 264
Table 11.5. The logical structures of verb classes in RRG 264
Table 11.6 Some thematic roles and typical macroroles 266
Table 11.7. Macroroles are defined on argument positions 266
|
adam_txt |
The Western Classical Tradition in Linguistics
examines ancient, medieval, post-renaissance
and modern conceptions of linguistics (i.e. the
study of language and languages). It identifies a
classical tradition extending from Ancient Greece
to the twenty-first century which has spread from
Europe to the other four inhabited continents.
It is a story of successive stages of language
study, each building upon, or reacting against,
the preceding period. There is a theoretical track
passing through Plato, Aristotle and the Stoics
to the scholastics of the later middle ages, on to
the vernacular grammarians of the renaissance,
then the rationalists and universal grammarians
of the seventeenth, eighteenth and twentieth
centuries. Joining this, is a tradition relating
language to thought handed on from Epicurus
and Lucretius to Locke, Condillac,
Saussure,
cognitivists. There is at the same time a
pedagogical track deriving from the Greek
grammarians Dionysius Thrax and
Dyscolus via the Latins, Donatus, Priscian,
and their commentators; a track that gives
rise to prescriptivism and applied linguistics.
The book's last chapter examines the
re-ascendancy of hypothetico-deductive theory
over the inductivist theories of the early twentieth
century, concluding that both approaches are
necessary for the proper modelling of language
in the twenty-first century and beyond.
Contents
List of Figures x
List of Tables xjj
Preface xiii
Acknowledgments xiv
Symbols and abbreviations used in the text xv
Chapter 1 Linguistics and the Western Classical Tradition 1
Linguistics, language, and languages 1
Viewpoints on language 5
The Western Classical Tradition in linguistics 9
Why no women? 14
Summary introduction to the Western Classical Tradition in linguistics 16
Chapter 2 Plato on language 20
Before Plato 20
Plato on meaning and grammar 25
Plato on the relationship between meaning and form in language 26
Particulars, universals, and abstract objects 32
Plato on meaning, form, and understanding 35
Chapter 3 Aristotle's legacy 36
Aristotle's footprints in the linguist's garden 36
Some basic Aristotelian assumptions 38
Aristotle's parts of speech 40
Aristotle on the phoneme 43
Semantic relations in Aristotle 44
Propositions and their meanings 46
Aristotle and the Gricean maxims 52
A summary of Aristotle's perambulations in the linguistics garden 54
Chapter 4 The Stoics and Varro 56
The third century BCE through to the third century CE 56
The Stoics 56
Varro 65
The development of a linguistic theory 75
viii Contents
Chapter 5 Quintilian, Dionysius, and Donatus: the start of a pedagogic
tradition 77
From philosophy to pedagogy 77
Quintilian 78
The Techne Grammatike of Dionysius Thrax 81
The Artes Grammaticae of Aelius Donatus 90
The parts of speech in the pedagogical tradition 94
Chapter 6 Apollonius and Priscian, the great grammarians among the
ancients 98
Apollonius 98
Priscian 108
Priscian's Institutiones Grammaticae 109
Priscian's De Nomine 119
Priscian's Partitiones 121
A summary of Priscian's contribution 122
Chapter 7 Prescriptivism from the early middle ages on 125
The prescriptivist tradition 125
The early middle ages 127
Isidore of Seville, encyclopaedist 129
The insular grammarians 133
ElfricofEynsham 136
Prescriptivism and standards in English grammar 138
Prescriptive linguistics from the middle ages till modern times 150
Chapter 8 'General' or 'universal' grammar: from the modistae to
Chomsky 153
The background to general grammar 153
The modistae or speculative grammarians 155
The recognition of vernacular languages 167
The search for a 'philosophical language' and a 'real character' 169
General or universal and rationalist grammar 175
From the modistae to Chomsky 184
Chapter 9 Phonetics, phonology, and comparative philology 188
The nineteenth century 188
A brief history of phonetics and phonology 188
Nineteenth century comparative philology 200
Linguistics at the end of the nineteenth century 214
Contents ix
Chapter 10 Language and thought: from Epicurus until after YVhorf 216
Speculations on the origin of language and linguistic relativity 216
Speculations on the origin of language 216
Humboldt on the mutual influence of language and culture 225
Boas 229
Sapir 231
Whorf 235
From linguistic relativity to cognitive grammar 239
Chapter 11 Saussurcan and functionalist linguistics: the study of language
as human communication 245
Saussure and functionalist!) 245
Saussurean linguistics 245
Functionalist linguistics 254
The study of language as human communication 267
Chapter 12 Paradigms for linguistic analysis: Bloomfieldian linguistics and
the Chomsky revolution 269
The problem of classifying and categorizing data 269
On kinds of inference applicable to linguistic theorizing 271
Bloomfieldian linguistics 275
Chomsky's disillusionment with the inductivist paradigm 284
The Chomsky revolution 286
Correlating theoretical constructs with the reality they purport to represent 288
Evaluating linguistic hypotheses: what a theory of language should do 289
An eclectic approach 294
Coda 296
Epilogue 298
References 299
Index 335
List of Figures
Figure 1.1. King Narmer defeats his enemies 1
Figure 1.2. The Sumerian logograph sag "head" 2
Figure 1.3. Sumerian c. 3000 BCE 2
Figure 1.4. The complex logograph for Sumerian geme "slave-girl" 2
Figure 1.5. The/t+vowel syllables of Linear B 3
Figure 1.6. Ptolemy cartouche from the Rosetta Stone 3
Figure 1.7a. Normal right-to-left 3
Figure 1.7b. Left-to-right 3
Figure 1.8. The /I/ graphemes in related scripts 4
Figure 1.9. Semitic ?Slep "ox", the symbol for ? comes to be used for A in Greek 4
Figure 1.10. A visual analysis of spoken Sit down will you? 6
Figure 1.11. Smileys 17
Figure 1.12 A map of the ancient world 19
Figure 2.1. The Greek inscription in scripta continua on the Rosetta Stone 20
Figure 2.2. Egyptian demotic papyrus c 1210 BCE 21
Figure 3.1. Apuleius's square of opposition 49
Figure 3.2. The square of opposition again 51
Figure 3.3. The modal square of opposition 51
Figure 4.1. The Stoic semiotic triangle and that of Ogden and Richards 58
Figure 4.2. Categories of the lekton 58
Figure 4.3. Cases falling from the upright 61
Figure 7.1. Europe in the early middle ages 126
Figure 8.1. Compositio 163
Figure 8.2. Types of transitives 164
Figure 8.3. Modistic analysis of Socrates percutit Platonem 164
Figure 8.4. Modistic analysis of Socrates albus currit bene 165
Figure 8.5. Modistic analysis of Video legentem librum 165
Figure 8.6. Wiikins's 40 categories 172
Figure 8.7. Virgil's book 185
Figure 9.1. A vowel diagram constructed from the First Grammatical Treatise 191
Figure 9.2. Hellwag's Vowel Chart of 1781 194
Figure 9.3. Grimm's 'cycle' (Kreislauf) 205
Figure 10.1. Figure and ground change in an ambiguous figure 234
Figure 11.1. The mood system in an early version of systemic grammar 257
List of figures xi
Figure 11.2. A lattice in part of the verbal group complex 258
Figure 11.3. Components of the layered structure of a clause in RRG 260
Figure 11.4. An English sentence 260
Figure U.S. A Japanese question 261
Figure 11.6. English translation of the Dyirbal in Figure 11.7 261
Figure 11.7. Dyirbal translation of the English in Figure 11.6 261
Figure 11.8. Operator projections 262
Figure 11.9. Operator projections: tense and illocutionary force marking 262
Figure 11.10. Operator projection in a Japanese question 263
Figure 11.11. An English NP compared with its Arremte translation 263
Figure 11.12. The syntax, semantics, and pragmatics of What did Dana give to Pat 266
yesterday?
Figure 12.1. Hockett's bottom-up analysis of an English sentence 272
List of Tables
Table 2.1. The three constituents of a letter 22
Table 3.1. The consonant triads 44
Table 3.2. Linguistic correlates for Aristotle's ten categories 45
Table 4.1. The Stoic tense-aspect system 63
Table 4.2. Derivational irregularity 70
Table 4.3. Varro's use of inflectional characteristics to distinguish parts of speech 72
Table 4.4. A restoration of Varro's case-gender matrix 73
Table 4.5. Varro's tense~aspect paradigm 73
Table6.1. Apollonius'four categories among the parts of speech 101
Table 6.2. Priscian's four categories among the parts of speech 101
Table 6.3. Graphemic simplification 110
Table 6.4. A morphophonemic rule 110
Table 6.5. Formation rule 1 for the past imperfect 115
Table 6.6. Formation rule 2 for the past imperfect 115
Table 7.1. /tlfric's parts of speech 137
Table 8.1. Modi ens and esse, matter and form 160
Table 8.2. The case of the suppositum 164
Table 9.1. Letters 190
Table 9.2. Table of equivalences between Greek and Latin 203
Table 9.3. Examples of Grimm's law 205
Table 9.4. Consonant correspondences under Grimm's law 205
Table 9.5. Conditions for Verner's Law 211
Table 9.6. Correspondences between PIE and its daughters 211
Table 9.7. Ablaut series in the stems of Greek verbs 212
Table 9.8. Ablaut series in the stems of lexically related words 212
Table 9.9. The primitive vowel system in PIE 212
Table 9.10. Hittite A as a reflex of the PIEIaryngeal 212
Table 11.1. Associative and syntagmatic relations 247
Table 11.2. Scale and category 258
Table 11.3. Word classes and their typical functions in groups 259
Table 11.4. Aspect-based verb classes 264
Table 11.5. The logical structures of verb classes in RRG 264
Table 11.6 Some thematic roles and typical macroroles 266
Table 11.7. Macroroles are defined on argument positions 266 |
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era_facet | Geschichte |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV022464088 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T17:41:38Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T20:58:09Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 1904768954 9781904768951 1904768962 9781904768968 |
language | English |
lccn | 2006022190 |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-015671702 |
oclc_num | 266972887 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-384 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-12 DE-20 DE-11 DE-188 |
owner_facet | DE-384 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-12 DE-20 DE-11 DE-188 |
physical | XI, 351 S. Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. |
publishDate | 2007 |
publishDateSearch | 2007 |
publishDateSort | 2007 |
publisher | Equinox |
record_format | marc |
series2 | Equinox textbooks and surveys in linguistics |
spelling | Allan, Keith 1943- Verfasser (DE-588)136785980 aut The Western classical tradition in linguistics Keith Allan 1. publ. London [u.a.] Equinox 2007 XI, 351 S. Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Equinox textbooks and surveys in linguistics Geschichte gnd rswk-swf Geschichte Linguistik Linguistics History Sprachtheorie (DE-588)4121708-1 gnd rswk-swf Sprachphilosophie (DE-588)4056486-1 gnd rswk-swf Linguistik (DE-588)4074250-7 gnd rswk-swf Linguistik (DE-588)4074250-7 s Sprachphilosophie (DE-588)4056486-1 s Geschichte z DE-604 Sprachtheorie (DE-588)4121708-1 s 1\p DE-604 http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip0616/2006022190.html Table of contents only Digitalisierung UB Augsburg application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=015671702&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Klappentext HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=015671702&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis 1\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk |
spellingShingle | Allan, Keith 1943- The Western classical tradition in linguistics Geschichte Linguistik Linguistics History Sprachtheorie (DE-588)4121708-1 gnd Sprachphilosophie (DE-588)4056486-1 gnd Linguistik (DE-588)4074250-7 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4121708-1 (DE-588)4056486-1 (DE-588)4074250-7 |
title | The Western classical tradition in linguistics |
title_auth | The Western classical tradition in linguistics |
title_exact_search | The Western classical tradition in linguistics |
title_exact_search_txtP | The Western classical tradition in linguistics |
title_full | The Western classical tradition in linguistics Keith Allan |
title_fullStr | The Western classical tradition in linguistics Keith Allan |
title_full_unstemmed | The Western classical tradition in linguistics Keith Allan |
title_short | The Western classical tradition in linguistics |
title_sort | the western classical tradition in linguistics |
topic | Geschichte Linguistik Linguistics History Sprachtheorie (DE-588)4121708-1 gnd Sprachphilosophie (DE-588)4056486-1 gnd Linguistik (DE-588)4074250-7 gnd |
topic_facet | Geschichte Linguistik Linguistics History Sprachtheorie Sprachphilosophie |
url | http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip0616/2006022190.html http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=015671702&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=015671702&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT allankeith thewesternclassicaltraditioninlinguistics |