The semantics of science
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The semantics of science
Continuum, c2005
- : hbk
- : pbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [209]-213) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
A radical new theory of the language of science by eminent linguist Roy Harris. In The Semantics of Science Roy Harris challenges a number of long-accepted assumptions about science and scientific discourse. According to Harris, science - like art, religion and history - is one of the supercategories adopted by modern societies for explaining and justifying certain types of human activity. Harris argues that these supercategories are themselves verbal constructs, and thus language-dependent. Each supercategory has its own semantics. The function of the supercategory is to integrate what would otherwise be unconnected forms of inquiry, and the result of such integrations is to draw a certain map of our intellectual world. Among the questions tackled are: Is mathematics a language? Does the language of science go beyond the bounds of common sense? And, if so, on what basis? In a wide-ranging historical survey, Harris rejects the view that the Greeks and medieval thinkers had any concept of scientific inquiry that corresponds to our own.
He pays close attention to the early work of the Royal Society and to the twentieth-century semantic crisis caused by attempting to integrate Einsteinian relativity and quantum mechanics. This lucidly written book will be of interest to all those engaged in linguistics, semiotics, philosophy of science and cultural studies.
Table of Contents
Preface
Introduction
1. Language and the Aristotelian scientist
2. Before and after Aristotle
3. Semantics and the Royal Society
4. Science in the kitchen
5. The rhetoric of linguistic science
6. Mathematics and the language of science
7. Science and common sense
8. Supercategory semantics
References
Index
by "Nielsen BookData"