Language, mind and body : a conceptual history
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Bibliographic Information
Language, mind and body : a conceptual history
Cambridge University Press, 2018
- : hardback
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Note
Includes bibliographical referendes (p. 250-269) and indexes
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Where is language? Answers to this have attempted to 'incorporate' language in an 'extended mind', through cognition that is 'embodied', 'distributed', 'situated' or 'ecological'. Behind these concepts is a long history that this book is the first to trace. Extending across linguistics, philosophy, psychology and medicine, as well as literary and religious dimensions of the question of what language is, and where it is located, this book challenges mainstream, mind-based accounts of language. Looking at research from the Middle Ages to the present day, and exploring the work of a range of scholars from Aristotle and Galen to Merleau-Ponty and Chomsky, it assesses raging debates about whether mind and language are centred in heart or brain, brain or nervous-muscular system, and whether they are innate or learned, individual or social. This book will appeal to scholars and advanced students in historical linguistics, cognitive linguistics, language evolution and the philosophy of language.
Table of Contents
- 1. Purification and hybrids
- 2. Language incorporated
- 3. Language in body and mind: antiquity
- 4. Middle Ages
- 5. Renaissance
- 6. Eighteenth century
- 7. Nineteenth century
- 8. The (we have never been) modern Age
- 9. Abstract and concrete language
- 10. Conclusion.
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