Two dimensions of meaning : similarity and contiguity in metaphor and metonymy, language, culture and ecology
著者
書誌事項
Two dimensions of meaning : similarity and contiguity in metaphor and metonymy, language, culture and ecology
Routledge, 2022
並立書誌 全1件
注記
Content Type: text (rdacontent), Media Type: unmediated (rdamedia), Carrier Type: volume (rdacarrier)
Includes bibliographical references and index
Summary: "The book takes as its point of departure the notion that similarity and contiguity are fundamental to meaning. It shows how they manifest in oral, literate, print and internet cultures, in language acquisition, pragmatics, dialogism, classification, the semantics of grammar, literature and, most centrally, metaphor and metonymy. The book situates these reflections on similarity and contiguity in the interplay of language, cognition, culture, and ideology, and within broader debates around such issues as capitalism, biodiversity, and human control over nature. Positing that while similarity-focused systems can be reductive, and have therefore been contested in social science, philosophy and poetry, and contiguity-based ones might disregard useful statistical and scientific evidence, Andrew Goatly argues for the need for humans to entertain diverse metaphors, models, and languages as ways of understanding and acting on our world. The volume also considers the cognitive connections between the similari
収録内容
- Introduction: The similarity/contiguity distinction and an outline of the book
- The two dimensions: similarity and contiguity in metaphor and metonymy
- The prevalence of metaphor and metonymy and their interplay
- The development of language in two dimensions of meaning
- Corpus linguistics, collocation and lexical priming
- The syntagmatic contiguity of metonymy in grammar and narrative
- Nouns and noun phrases: the similarity dimension, classification, quantification and commodification
- Nouns and the similarity mode: classification, taxonomies, paradigms and measurement in science and mathematics
- Resisting noun-based classification and scientific universals in sociology, linguistics, philosophy and poetry
- Resisting classification, and emphasizing process: GM Hopkins, Duns Scotus, Taoism, Buddhism
- Process and interrelatedness in quantum physics and Blackfoot, a language without nouns
- Feyerabend and Conquest of abundance: abstraction versus the richness of being
- Conclusion (1): Evaluating the two dimensions
- Conclusion (2): Interplay, synthesis, and the need for diverse metaphors
- Appendix 1: Metaphor themes associated with the canonical event schema: "Change is movement", "Activity is movement forwards", etc.
- Appendix 2: Lexical details of the "Emotion is sense impression" nexus
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内容説明
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