How to Show Things with Words is an interdisciplinary research study
at the interface between linguistics and philosophy which sheds new
light on the narrative-theoretical issue of proximal vs. distal stance
adoption in discourse. Narrative distance ultimately depends on the
epistemological source of the information conveyed, but English and
other Indo-European languages have no inflectional systems for
(en)coding that source of knowledge. To fill in the gap, speech act
theory is (re)considered in the light of philosophical research on
linguistic functions and a parallel is drawn between grammaticalized
evidential categories and the objectifying acts of Husserl's
phenomenology of constitution. These intuitive vs. signitive
intentional acts do, indeed, roughly correspond to direct vs. indirect
evidentiary forms and can be inferred from the temporal-perspectival
organization of discourse by the so-called intimation or announcement
function of language-systems. It turns out that perspectival immediacy
requires tenses with overlapping event- and reference-points, but
predictions of the sort are non-monotonic forms of reasoning
defeasible by quantificational aspect distinctions, on the one hand,
and inherent meaning considerations, on the other. To substantiate
this claim, the bulk of the book provides an in-depth formal semantic
account of tense, aspect and Aktionsart, interwoven with a detailed
analysis of the cognitive processes associated with
eventuality-description types. The book adresses an audience of
linguists in general, formal semanticists, cognitive scientists,
philosophers and narratologists with an interest in natural language
semantics.
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A Study on Logic, Language and Literature
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9783110899627
Publisert
2015
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
De Gruyter
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter