Mental States: Language and cognitive structureAndrea C. Schalley, Drew Khlentzos John Benjamins Publishing, 2007 - 362 Seiten The contributions to this volume focus on what language and language use reveals about cognitive structure and underlying cognitive categories. Wide-ranging and thought-provoking essays from linguists and psychologists within this volume investigate the insights conceptual categorization can give into the organization and structure of the mind and specific mental states. Topics and linguistic phenomena discussed include narratives and story telling, language development, figurative language, linguistic categorization, linguistic relativity, and the linguistic coding of mental states such as perceptions and beliefs. With contributions at the forefront of current debate, this book will appeal to anyone with an interest in language and the cognitive structures that support it. |
Inhalt
Implications | 35 |
Some early implications for the evolution | 43 |
Multiagent communication planning and collaboration based | 55 |
The modallogical interpretation of the causation of bodily actions | 123 |
Evidence | 153 |
Language skills in a young adult | 171 |
Ethnobiological classification and the environment in Northern Australia | 239 |
Pseudorelative perception verb | 267 |
The case of change | 289 |
Theory and practice | 311 |
Another look at linguistic relativity | 331 |
351 | |
357 | |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
adult analysis aspect assignment Australian autism beginnings believe biological child Chinese clause cognitive complement complex component concepts consider construction context contrast cultural described discussed distinction domain effects English event evidence example experience explication expressions fact feel figurative focus function given Goddard grammatical groups hand human hyperbole important indicate involved kind knowledge language lexical Lincoln's linguistic Little Mawng meaning memory mental mind names narrative nature nouns object occur participants particular perception person perspective Pigs positive possible predicates presented Press primes processes pseudorelative question reality refer relative remain remember sčitať semantic sense sentence shows similar someone speakers species speech story stress structure suggest task taste temporal theory things thought tion trochaic understanding universal utterances verbs Wierzbicka wolf words