Dialectical theory of meaning

Bibliographic Information

Dialectical theory of meaning

Mihailo Marković ; [translated by David Rougé and Joan Coddington from the Serbo-Croat]

(Boston studies in the philosophy of science, v. 81)

D. Reidel , Sold and distributed in the U.S.A. and Canada by Kluwer Academic Publishers, c1984

Available at  / 28 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

"New edition based on the work originally published by Nolit, Belgrade, under the title: Dijalektička teorija značenja"--T.p. verso

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This prize monograph was a pioneering work among Marxist philosophers, East and West, twenty-five years ago. To our mind, the work would have been received with respect and pleasure by philosophers of many viewpoints if it had been known abroad then. Now, revised for this English-language editiJn by our dear and honored colleague Mihailo Markovic, it is still admirable, still the insightful and stimulating accomplishment of a pioneering philosophical and scientific mind, still resonating to the three themes of technical mastery, humane purpose, political critique. Markovic has always worked with the scientific and the humanist disci plines inseparably, a faithful as well as a creative man oflate twentieth century thOUght. Reasoning is to be studied as any other object of investigation would be: empirically, theoretically, psychologically, historically, imaginatively. But the entry is often through the study of meaning, in language and in life. In his splendid guide into the work before us, his Introduction, Markovic shows his remarkable ability as the teacher, motivating, clarifying, sketching the whole, illuminating the detail, Critically situating the problem within a practical understanding of the tool oflanguage.

Table of Contents

One / Epistemological Foundations of the Dialectical Theory of Meaning.- I. General Logical Problems of Constructing a Theory of Meaning.- II. Categories of Objective Reality.- III. Symbols.- IV. Objective Experience.- V. Concepts and Other Categories of Thought.- Two / Analysis of Meaning.- VI. Meaning as a Complex of Relationships.- VII. Mental Meaning.- VIII. Objective Meaning.- IX. Linguistic Meaning.- X. Practical Meaning.- Three / Meaning and Communication.- XI. The Genesis of Signs and Meaning.- XII. General Definition of Meaning: The Interrelationships of the Individual Dimensions of Meaning.- XIII. Conditions of Effective Communication.- Index of Names.

by "Nielsen BookData"

Related Books: 1-1 of 1

Details

Page Top