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Foundations of Language [[electronic resource] ] : Brain, Meaning, Grammar, Evolution / / Ray Jackendoff
Foundations of Language [[electronic resource] ] : Brain, Meaning, Grammar, Evolution / / Ray Jackendoff
Autore Jackendoff Ray
Pubbl/distr/stampa Oxford, GBR : , : Oxford University Press, UK, , 2003
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (498 p.)
Disciplina 401
Soggetto topico Lingüística
Traducción e interpretación
Libros electrónicos
ISBN 0-19-154439-6
9786611944261
1-281-94426-2
1-4356-9792-8
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Record Nr. UNINA-9910453971903321
Jackendoff Ray  
Oxford, GBR : , : Oxford University Press, UK, , 2003
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Foundations of Language [[electronic resource] ] : Brain, Meaning, Grammar, Evolution / / Ray Jackendoff
Foundations of Language [[electronic resource] ] : Brain, Meaning, Grammar, Evolution / / Ray Jackendoff
Autore Jackendoff Ray
Pubbl/distr/stampa Oxford, GBR : , : Oxford University Press, UK, , 2003
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (498 p.)
Disciplina 401
Soggetto topico Lingüística
Traducción e interpretación
Libros electrónicos
ISBN 0-19-154439-6
9786611944261
1-281-94426-2
1-4356-9792-8
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Record Nr. UNINA-9910782863603321
Jackendoff Ray  
Oxford, GBR : , : Oxford University Press, UK, , 2003
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Foundations of Language : Brain, Meaning, Grammar, Evolution / / Ray Jackendoff
Foundations of Language : Brain, Meaning, Grammar, Evolution / / Ray Jackendoff
Autore Jackendoff Ray
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Oxford, GBR : , : Oxford University Press, UK, , 2003
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (498 p.)
Disciplina 401
401.9
Soggetto topico Lingüística
Traducción e interpretación
Libros electrónicos
ISBN 0-19-154439-6
9786611944261
1-281-94426-2
1-4356-9792-8
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Intro -- Contents -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- PART I: PSYCHOLOGICAL AND BIOLOGICAL FOUNDATIONS -- 1 The Complexity of Linguistic Structure -- 1.1 A sociological problem -- 1.2 The structure of a simple sentence -- 1.3 Phonological structure -- 1.4 Syntactic structure -- 1.5 Semantic/conceptual and spatial structure -- 1.6 Connecting the levels -- 1.7 Anaphora and unbounded dependencies -- 2 Language as a Mental Phenomenon -- 2.1 What do we mean by "mental"? -- 2.2 How to interpret linguistic notation mentally -- 2.3 Knowledge of language -- 2.4 Competence versus performance -- 2.5 Language in a social context (all too briefly) -- 3 Combinatoriality -- 3.1 The need for an f-mental grammar -- 3.2 Some types of rule -- 3.3 Lexical rules -- 3.4 What are rules of grammar? -- 3.5 Four challenges for cognitive neuroscience -- 4 Universal Grammar -- 4.1 The logic of the argument -- 4.2 Getting the hypothesis right -- 4.3 Linguistic universals -- 4.4 Substantive universals, repertoire of rule types, and architectural universals -- 4.5 The balance of linguistic and more general capacities -- 4.6 The poverty of the stimulus -- the Paradox of Language Acquisition -- 4.7 Poverty of the stimulus in word learning -- 4.8 How Universal Grammar can be related to genetics -- 4.9 Evidence outside linguistic structure for Universal Grammar/Language Acquisition Device -- 4.10 Summary of factors involved in the theory of Universal Grammar -- PART II: ARCHITECTURAL FOUNDATIONS -- 5 The Parallel Architecture -- 5.1 Introduction to Part II -- 5.2 A short history of syntactocentrism -- 5.3 Tiers and interfaces in phonology -- 5.4 Syntax and phonology -- 5.5 Semantics as a generative system -- 5.6 The tripartite theory and some variants -- 5.7 The lexicon and lexical licensing -- 5.8 Introduction to argument structure.
5.9 How much of syntactic argument structure can be predicted from semantics? -- 5.10 A tier for grammatical functions? -- 6 Lexical Storage versus Online Construction -- 6.1 Lexical items versus words -- 6.2 Lexical items smaller than words -- 6.3 Psycholinguistic considerations -- 6.4 The status of lexical redundancy rules -- 6.5 Idioms -- 6.6 A class of constructional idioms -- 6.7 Generalizing the notion of construction -- 6.8 The status of inheritance hierarchies -- 6.9 Issues of acquisition -- 6.10 Universal Grammar as a set of attractors -- 6.11 Appendix: Remarks on HPSG and Construction Grammar -- 7 Implications for Processing -- 7.1 The parallel competence architecture forms a basis for a processing architecture -- 7.2 How the competence model can constrain theories of processing -- 7.3 Remarks on working memory -- 7.4 More about lexical access -- 7.5 Structure-constrained modularity -- 8 An Evolutionary Perspective on the Architecture -- 8.1 The dialectic -- 8.2 Bickerton's proposal and auxiliary assumptions -- 8.3 The use of symbols -- 8.4 Open class of symbols -- 8.5 A generative system for single symbols: protophonology -- 8.6 Concatenation of symbols to build larger utterances -- 8.7 Using linear position to signal semantic relations -- 8.8 Phrase structure -- 8.9 Vocabulary for relational concepts -- 8.10 Grammatical categories and the "basic body plan" of syntax -- 8.11 Morphology and grammatical functions -- 8.12 Universal Grammar as a toolkit again -- PART III: SEMANTIC AND CONCEPTUAL FOUNDATIONS -- 9 Semantics as a Mentalistic Enterprise -- 9.1 Introduction to part III -- 9.2 Semantics vis-à-vis mainstream generative grammar -- 9.3 Meaning and its interfaces -- 9.4 Chomsky and Fodor on semantics -- 9.5 Some "contextualist" approaches to meaning -- 9.6 Is there a specifically linguistic semantics?.
9.7 Four non-ways to separate linguistic semantics from conceptualization -- 10 Reference and Truth -- 10.1 Introduction -- 10.2 Problems with the common-sense view: "language" -- 10.3 Problems with the common-sense view: "objects" -- 10.4 Pushing "the world" into the mind -- 10.5 A simple act of deictic reference -- 10.6 The functional correlates of consciousness -- 10.7 Application to theory of reference -- 10.8 Entities other than objects -- 10.9 Proper names, kinds, and abstract objects -- 10.10 Satisfaction and truth -- 10.11 Objectivity, error, and the role of the community -- 11 Lexical Semantics -- 11.1 Boundary conditions on theories of lexical meaning -- 11.2 The prospects for decomposition into primitives -- 11.3 Polysemy -- 11.4 Taxonomic structure -- 11.5 Contributions from perceptual modalities -- 11.6 Other than necessary and sufficient conditions -- 11.7 The same abstract organization in many semantic fields -- 11.8 Function-argument structure across semantic fields -- 11.9 Qualia structure: characteristic activities and purposes -- 11.10 Dot objects -- 11.11 Beyond -- 12 Phrasal Semantics -- 12.1 Simple composition -- 12.2 Enriched composition -- 12.3 The referential tier -- 12.4 Referential dependence and referential frames -- 12.5 The information structure (topic/focus) tier -- 12.6 Phrasal semantics and Universal Grammar -- 12.7 Beyond: discourse, conversation, narrative -- 13 Concluding Remarks -- References -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- K -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- Q -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- W -- X -- Y -- Z.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910807641503321
Jackendoff Ray  
Oxford, GBR : , : Oxford University Press, UK, , 2003
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui