Language, Feeling, and the Brain: The Evocative VectorTransaction Publishers, 31 дек. 2011 г. - Всего страниц: 259 Linguistic theory since the Cognitive Revolution has fol- lowed one of the premises of that revolution by largely sidelining the issue of emotions and concentrating on those aspects of language that are more strictly cognitive. However, during the last ten years research in cognitive science, especially in neuropsychology, has begun to fill in the gaps left by the exclusion of emotions from cognitive research. The work of those like Oatley, Zajonc, Damasio, and LeDoux, to name a few, has demonstrated both that it is possible to construct models of how emotions play into the workings of the psyche and that they are necessary in giving us a balanced view of the human mind. Language, Feeling, and the Brain attempts to apply the fruits of this new research in emotion to our understanding of language itself. Building on Karl Pribram's integrated model of emotions and motivations, the book takes an eclectic approach to explaining how emotions contribute to the nature of language, drawing on research done in neuropsychology, philosophy, cognitive linguistics, anthropology, and related fields. Its aim is to construct a propositional model for how the emotions may have contributed to the emergence of symbolic formation, most especially in the forms of gesture and speech, and how identifying that emotional influence sheds new light on everything we have had to say about language itself, from lexis and grammar to culture and literature. |
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Стр. ix
... fact that the dialectic between the two views represented a great opportunity for bringing together two powerful features of language in the service of the language learner. Moreover, it quickly became apparent to me that, at the time ...
... fact that the dialectic between the two views represented a great opportunity for bringing together two powerful features of language in the service of the language learner. Moreover, it quickly became apparent to me that, at the time ...
Стр. 1
... fact that one of the most gifted writers in the English language attributes these qualities to words—to the “word in itself,” rather than the meaning it conveys—suggests a contradiction of the conventional wisdom that has dominated our ...
... fact that one of the most gifted writers in the English language attributes these qualities to words—to the “word in itself,” rather than the meaning it conveys—suggests a contradiction of the conventional wisdom that has dominated our ...
Стр. 2
... fact that feelings inform language as much as the cognitive features that have come to dominate our study of it. In his masterful The Mind's New Science: A History of the Cognitive Revolution, Howard Gardner (1987) points out that the ...
... fact that feelings inform language as much as the cognitive features that have come to dominate our study of it. In his masterful The Mind's New Science: A History of the Cognitive Revolution, Howard Gardner (1987) points out that the ...
Стр. 3
... fact that the Chomskyan paradigm shift has placed modern linguistics squarely in the middle of the cognitive revolution is inescapable. Moreover, that fact provides a key to understanding other features of contemporary linguistics that ...
... fact that the Chomskyan paradigm shift has placed modern linguistics squarely in the middle of the cognitive revolution is inescapable. Moreover, that fact provides a key to understanding other features of contemporary linguistics that ...
Стр. 6
... fact, Gardner's remark is probably an understatement of the true nature of cognitive study. His own very comprehensive and thorough work is remarkable for the fact that it shows no index entry for “emotions,” “affect,” or “feelings ...
... fact, Gardner's remark is probably an understatement of the true nature of cognitive study. His own very comprehensive and thorough work is remarkable for the fact that it shows no index entry for “emotions,” “affect,” or “feelings ...
Содержание
1 | |
15 | |
Chapter 2 | 29 |
Chapter 3 | 45 |
Chapter 4 | 67 |
Chapter 5 | 93 |
Chapter 6 | 113 |
Chapter 7 | 135 |
Chapter 9 | 177 |
Chapter 10 | 193 |
Chapter 11 | 207 |
Conclusion | 221 |
Bibliography | 229 |
Subject Index | 237 |
Name Index | 245 |
Chapter 8 | 157 |
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Language, Feeling, and the Brain: The Evocative Vector Daniel Shanahan Недоступно для просмотра - 2017 |
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
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