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LEADER: 05418cam a22003974a 4500
001 012971217-5
005 20111115153958.0
008 110224s2011 ne a b 001 0 eng
010 $a 2011008153
020 $a9789027211828 (pbk. : alk. paper)
020 $a9027211825 (pbk. : alk. paper)
020 $a9789027286864 (eb)
020 $a9027286868 (eb)
035 0 $aocn704121334
040 $aDLC$beng$cDLC$dYDX$dYDXCP$dBWX$dCDX$dERASA
041 1 $aeng$hger
042 $apcc
050 00 $aP105$b.B8513 2011
082 00 $a400$222
100 1 $aBühler, Karl,$d1879-1963.
240 10 $aSprachtheorie.$lEnglish
245 10 $aTheory of language :$bthe representational function of language /$cKarl Bühler ; translated by Donald Fraser Goodwin, in collaboration with Achim Eschbach.
260 $aAmsterdam ;$aPhiladelphia :$bJohn Benjamins Pub. Co.,$cc2011.
300 $axcviii, 518 p. :$bill. ;$c25 cm.
500 $aTranslation of: Sprachtheorie.
500 $aTranslated from the German.
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references (p. [475]-485) and indexes.
505 0 $aPreface: Traces of Buhler's semiotic legacy in modern linguistics / Werner Abraham -- Editor's introduction / Karl Buhler, sematologist -- Introduction: theory of language yesterday and today : Historical works ; Paul's "principles of the history of language" -- dependency on Descartes -- natural sciences and history ; Saussure's Cours -- Substance-oriented thought in the 19th century ; Husserl's programme in the "logical investigations" -- I. The principles of language research : The idea and plan of the axiomatics ; Observations and the ideas guiding research ; Exact recordings -- three manners of understanding ; Initial object of linguistic research -- the conceptual world of the linguistic researcher ; Axioms of language research ; The four principles ; The model of language as Organon (A) ; Manners of appearance of the concrete speech event ; Inadequacy of the causal view of substance-oriented thought ; A new model: the three semantic functions of language ; Expressions and appeal as independent variables in addition to representation -- the three books on language ; The significative nature of language (B) ; The constructive model of language ; The etyma of the words for sign ; Direct analysis of the concept of sign -- comparative psychology -- a general formula ; "Aliquid stat pro aliquo": two determinations ; The principle of abstractive relevance, illustrated by phonology ; The problem of abstraction ; Two forms of material fallacy ;
505 0 $aSpeech action and language work: speech act and language structure (C) ; Inadequacy of previous dichotomies: the four-celled pattern ; Speech action and language work -- empractical speech -- la parole ; The work of art in language -- the theory of speech action ; The structures in language -- criticism -- structural survey in linguistics -- the higher level of formalization -- comparisons outside the linguistic realm -- intersubjectivity ; Theory of speech acts -- Steinthal and Husserl -- appreciation of Husserl's theory of acts -- the social factor in language ; Word and sentence. The S-F-system of the type language (D) ; The features of the concept of language ; Analysis of a one-class system of communicative signals ; The two-class system language -- the dogma of lexicon and syntax ; The productivity of field system ; Logic and linguistics
505 0 $aII. The deictic field of language and deictic words : Introduction ; The signpost and the speech action ; The deictic field -- modes of deixis ; Wegener and Brugmann as predecessors ; Speech about perceptual things ; Psychological analysis ; The psychological foundations of the modes of positional deixis in Indo-European ; Brugmann's modes of deixis and the general problem ; The myth of the deictic origin of language ; *to-deixis and ille-deixis ; The second and third deictic mode ; Natural deictic clues ; Quality of origin and the acoustic characterization of the voice ; Directions in thou-deixis and istic-deixis ; Younder-deixis ; A general question ; The origin of the deictic field and its mark ; The here-now-I system of subjective orientation ; The meaning of the deictic words from a logical perspective ; The words for 'here' and 'I' as cognates ; The indispensability of deictic clues ; The role of 'I' and 'thou' ; The usual classification of the pronouns -- criticism ; The necessity of demonstration ; Imagination-oriented deixis and the anaphoric use of deictic words ; The second and third modes of deixis ; Ocular demonstration and imagination-oriented deixis as a psychological problem ; Subjective orientation when awake and its components ; Spatial orientation and deictic speech ; Movement of the origo in the tactile bodily image ; Temporal orientation ; The three types of imagination-oriented deixis ; Psychological reduction ; Displacements -- dramatic and epic procedure ; Egocentric and Topomnestic deixis in various languages ; The deictic field ; The inclusive and exclusive 'we' ; Coalescence of deictic particles with prepositions ; Egocentric and topomnestic deixis -- the class of 'prodemonstratives' -- examples from Japanese and Amerindian languages.
650 0 $aLanguage and languages.
700 1 $aGoodwin, Donald Fraser.
700 1 $aEschbach, Achim.
899 $a415_565086
988 $a20111115
906 $0DLC