Theory of language : the representational function of language /
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Author / Creator: | Bühler, Karl, 1879-1963 |
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Uniform title: | Sprachtheorie. English |
Imprint: | Amsterdam ; Philadelphia : J. Benjamins Pub. Co., 1990. |
Description: | lxii, 508 p. : ill. ; 23 cm. |
Language: | English |
Series: | Foundations of semiotics v. 25 |
Subject: | Language and languages Language and languages. |
Format: | Print Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/1122865 |
Table of Contents:
- 1. Editor's Introduction
- 2. Translator's Preface
- 3. Preface
- 4. Introduction
- 5. 0. Historical Works
- 6. 1. Paul's "Principles of the History of Language"
- 7. 2. Saussure's Cours
- 8. 3. Husserl's programme in the "Logical Investigations"
- 9. I. The Principles of Language Research
- 10. 1. The Idea and Plan of the Axiomatics
- 11. 1.0 Observations and the ideas guiding research
- 12. 1.1 Exact recordings
- 13. 1.2 Initial object of linguistic research
- 14. 1.3 Axioms of language research
- 15. 1.4 The four principles
- 16. 2. The Model of Language as Organon (A)
- 17. 2.0 Manners of appearance of the concrete speech event
- 18. 2.1 Inadequacy of the causal view of substance-oriented thought
- 19. 2.2 The new model
- 20. 2.3 Expression and appeal as independent variables in addition to representation
- 21. 3. The Significative Nature of Language (B)
- 22. 3.0 The constructive model of language
- 23. 3.1 The etyma of the words for sign
- 24. 3.2 Direct analysis of the concept of sign
- 25. 3.3 "Aliquid stat pro aliquo"
- 26. 3.4 The principle of abstractive relevance, illustrated by phonology
- 27. 3.5 The problem of abstraction
- 28. 3.6 Two forms of material fallacy
- 29. 4. Speech Action and Language Work; Speech Act and Language Structure (C)
- 30. 4.0 Inadequacy of previous dichotomies
- 31. 4.1 Speech action and language work
- 32. 4.2 The work of art in language
- 33. 4.3 The structures in language
- 34. 4.4 Theory of speech acts -- Steinthal and Husserl
- 35. 5. Word and Sentence
- 36. 5.0 The features of the concept of language
- 37. 5.1 Analysis of a one-class system of communicative signals
- 38. 5.2 The two-class system language
- 39. 5.3 The productivity of field systems
- 40. 5.4 Logic and linguistics
- 41. II. The Deictic Field of Language and Deictic Words
- 42. Introduction
- 43. The\signpost and the speech action
- 44. The\deictic field -- modes of deixis
- 45. Wegener and Brugmann as predecessors
- 46. Speech about perceptual things
- 47. Psychological analysis
- 48. 6. The Psychological Foundations of the Modes of Positional Deixis in Indo-European
- 49. 6.0 Brugmann's modes of deixis and the general problem
- 50. 6.1 The myth of the deictic origin of language
- 51. 6.2 *to-deixis and ille-deixis
- 52. 6.3 The second and third deictic mode
- 53. 6.4 Natural deictic clues
- 54. 6.5 Quality of origin and the acoustic characterization of the voice
- 55. 6.6 Directions in thou-deixis and istic-deixis
- 56. 6.7 Yonder-deixis
- 57. 6.8 A general question
- 58. 7. The Origin of the Deictic Field and its Mark
- 59. 7.0 The here-now-I system of subjective orientation
- 60. 7.1 The meaning of the deictic words from a logical perspective
- 61. 7.2 The words for 'here' and 'I' as cognates
- 62. 7.3 The indispensability of deictic clues
- 63. 7.4 The role of 'I' and 'thou'
- 64. 7.5 The usual classification of the pronouns
- 65. 7.6 The necessity of demonstration
- 66. 8. Imagination-Oriented Deixis and the Anaphoric Use of Deictic Words
- 67. 8.0 The second and third modes of deixis
- 68. 8.1 Ocular demonstration and imagination-oriented deixis as a psychological problem
- 69. 8.2 Subjective orientation when awake and its components
- 70. 8.3 Spatial orientation and deictic speech
- 71. 8.4 Movement of the origo in the tactile bodily image
- 72. 8.5 Temporal orientation
- 73. 8.6 The three types of imagination-oriented deixis
- 74. 8.7 Psychological reduction
- 75. 8.8 Displacements
- 76. 9. Egocentric and Topomnestic Deixis in Various Languages
- 77. 9.0 The deictic field
- 78. 9.1 The inclusive and exclusive 'we'
- 79. 9.2 Coalescence of deictic particles with prepositions
- 80. 9.3 Egocentric and topomnestic deixis