Perspectives on Language Structure and Language Change
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Otros Autores: | , , , |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Amsterdam/Philadelphia :
John Benjamins Publishing Company,
2019.
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Colección: | Current Issues in Linguistic Theory Ser.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Intro; PERSPECTIVES ON LANGUAGE STRUCTURE AND LANGUAGE CHANGE; Editorial page; Title page; Copyright page; Table of contents; Preface; Perspectives on language structure and language change: An introduction; Theory of language change; Indexicality; Problems of reanalysis; Actualization; Language change and diachronic typology in Balto-Slavic; Concluding remarks; References; Part I. On the theory of language change; Andersen (1973) and dichotomies of change; 1. Introduction; 2. Evolutive versus adaptive and its historical context; 2.1 Evolutive versus adaptive in Andersen (1973)
- 2.2 Earlier conceptions of this distinction3. Evolutive versus adaptive and ADC's reception; 3.1 Initial survey; 3.2 The continued development of the evolutive/adaptive dichotomy; 3.3 Reception of evolutive versus adaptive: The first twenty-five years; 4. Why this reception for ADC and the evolutive/adaptive distinction?; 4.1 Generative rules?; 4.2 Competing terminological distinctions; 5. More recent attention for ADC and the evolutive/adaptive distinction; 5.1 "Adaptive sound change" in Dahl (2004); 5.2 A recent resurgence?; 6. Conclusion; References
- Induction and tradition: "As time goes by ..."
- Play it again!1. Introduction; 2. Language acquisition and change in the context of Total Human Evolutionary Communication; 2. Language acquisition and change in the context of Total Human Evolutionary Communication; 2.1 Cognitive Consciousness and Communicative Consciousness; 2.2 Perception vs. Communication; 2.3 The same old story: The trivium of Communion, Practice, and Tradition; 2.3 The same old story: The trivium of Communion, Practice, and Tradition; 3. The architectonic of languaging: Total Human Evolutionary Communication
- 3.1 The levels of Total Human Evolutionary Cognition and Communication (THECC)3.2 The evolution of Languaging Semiosis into Language Gaming; 3.3 The evolution of Language Gaming; 3.4 Language Gaming as a teleological process: Energeia
- entelechy and syntaxis; 3.4 Language Gaming as a teleological process: Energeia
- entelechy and syntaxis; 3.5 The social deontology of Language Gaming; 3.6 The two peripheral phases of Language Gaming: Dynamis and ergon
- paradeigma and syntagma; 3.6 The two peripheral phases of Language Gaming: Dynamis and ergon
- paradeigma and syntagma
- 4. Communication, meta-communication, and Universals of Language Gaming (the 'three-in-one')4.1 Communion (panchronic); 4.2 Practice (synchronic); 4.3 Tradition (diachronic); 4.3.1 Abduction
- discovery: Linguistic experiences as surprising facts to be explained by a linguistic competence (G1); 4.3.1 Abduction
- discovery: Linguistic experiences as surprising facts to be explained by a linguistic competence (G1); 4.3.2 Deduction
- experimentation: The trial and error testing of the predicted consequences of the hypothesized linguistic competence (G1) as put to Practice (G2)
- 4.3.3 Induction
- confirmation: The Conventionalization of the Communicative Competence (G3)