An essay towards a real character, and a philosophical language

書誌事項

An essay towards a real character, and a philosophical language

John Wilkins

(Works in the history of language)

Thoemmes Press, 2002

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注記

Reprint from the 1668 edition

"An alphabetical dictionary, wherein all English words according to their various significations, are either referred to their places in the philosophical tables, or explained by such words as are in those tables" ([157] p. at end) has special t.-p.

内容説明・目次

内容説明

John Wilkins, Bishop of Chester (1614-72), was a founding member of the Royal Society and one of the most influential thinkers of the 17th century. His masterpiece, "An Essay Towards a Real Character and a Philosophical Language", is a key text in the history of language. Ready for publication in January 1666 but destroyed by the Great Fire, the work finally published in 1668 is Wilkins's attempt at creating a universal language. Wilkins maintained that because all people's minds functioned in the same way and had a similar "apprehension of things", it should be possible to cultivate a rational universal language and a character that would also articulate things and notions. Not only would they aid international scientific communication and commerce, but "prove the shortest and plainest way for the attainment of real Knowledge, that hath been yet offered to the World". Although Wilkins's universal language was never adopted for common use (and he never regarded the work as complete), it was widely considered to be superior to the earliest work by George Dalgarno, "Ars signorum" (1661). The first portion of the "Essay" focuses on an examination of the origins, change, adoption and diffusion of languages and alphabets. The second portion contains his "Universal Philosophy" classification system, with tables of animals, birds, fishes and plants drawn up by the two great naturalists, Francis Willoughby and John Ray. It was widely considered that the botanical and biological classifications were superior to any yet available, greatly advancing the creation of a scientific nomenclature. The work inspired John Ray to revise his own system. Appended to the "Essay" is an alphabetical dictionary which lists English words, their symbols in the real character, and references to their proper place in the classification. Some of the greatest minds of the 18th century received Wilkins's creation enthusiastically: John Locke recommended the "Essay" over Dalgarno's work; Newton mentioned the book in his correspondence; Erasmus Darwin admired it; and the anthropologist Lord Monboddo praised it in his "Origin and Progress of Language". The "Essay" continued to attract widepsread attention in the 19th and 20th centuries: Roget, author of the ever popular "Thesaurus", articulated his indebtedness to Wilkins, and based his classifications on Wilkins's system. Wilkins's treatment of the alphabet and phonetics were regarded as authoritative for many generations after his death, and in recent times the work has come to the attention of those interested in the development of symbolic logic and semantics. The work, reprinted here in its original size, is a valuable text for all scholars concerned with the history of language and science.

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