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Language and Human Nature Mark Halpern

Language and Human Nature By Mark Halpern

Language and Human Nature by Mark Halpern


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Summary

Exposes a century's worth of flawed thinking about language, to exhibit some of the dangers it presents, and to suggest a path to recovery. This book examines the causes of changes in the English vocabulary. It discusses a variety of verbal solecisms, vulgarisms, and infelicities generally.

Language and Human Nature Summary

Language and Human Nature by Mark Halpern

Language and Human Nature exposes a century's worth of flawed thinking about language, to exhibit some of the dangers it presents, and to suggest a path to recovery. It begins by examining the causes of changes in the English vocabulary. These sometimes take the form of new words, but more often that of new senses for old words. In the course of this examination, Halpern discusses a wide variety of verbal solecisms, vulgarisms, and infelicities generally. His objective is not to deplore such things, but to expose the reasons for their existence, the human traits that generate them.A large part of this book is devoted to contesting the claims of academic linguists to be the only experts in the study of language change. Language is too central to civilized life to be so deeply misunderstood without causing a multitude of troubles throughout our culture. We are currently experiencing such troubles, a number of which are examined here. The exposure of linguists' misunderstandings is not an end in itself, but a necessary first step in recovery from the confusion we are now enmeshed in.The picture of the relationship between words and thoughts that is part of the attempt to deal with language scientifically is partly responsible for dangerous cultural developments. The attempt by linguists to treat their subject scientifically makes them view meaning as an irritating complication to be ignored if possible. It turns them into formalists who try to understand language by studying its physical representations, with a resort to semantics only when unavoidable. With words practically stripped of their role as bearers of meaning, it becomes easy to see them as unimportant. Halpern's book is a serious critique of such oversimplified theorizing.

About Mark Halpern

Mark Halpern

Table of Contents

1: The Question of Change in Language; 2: How Language is Studied Today; 3: Linguistic Authority: Rules, Dictionaries, and Teaching; 4: Descriptivist, Prescriptivist, and Linguistic Activist; 5: The Eskimo Snow Vocabulary Controversy-A Case Study; 6: A People's Linguistics; 7: Restoring Rhetoric to Its Throne; 8: Decadence and Diseases of Language; 9: Plagiarism and Misquotation: the Use of Others' Thoughts and Words; 10: What is To Be Done?; APPENDIX A: Linguistics as a Science; APPENDIX B: Eskimo-Language Terms for Snow and Ice; APPENDIX C: AI and the Golem project - the reverse-engineering twins; APPENDIX D: Notes on Chomsky and the Chomskyan literature; APPENDIX E: A Language of Mathematics? A Proof of Programs?; APPENDIX F: The Principal Players Identified; APPENDIX G: What is A 'Foreign Term'?

Additional information

NLS9781412808255
9781412808255
1412808251
Language and Human Nature by Mark Halpern
New
Paperback
Taylor & Francis Inc
2008-08-30
416
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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