View Full Paper - European Consortium for Political Research
... points seem to be lost on these scholars. As IR is steaming ahead into a ‘practice turn’ (Adler & Pouliot 2011; Andersen & Neumann 2012; Neumann 2002), I argue that it should take another look at language. More specifically, it should take a look at relations across languages: interlingual relations ...
... points seem to be lost on these scholars. As IR is steaming ahead into a ‘practice turn’ (Adler & Pouliot 2011; Andersen & Neumann 2012; Neumann 2002), I argue that it should take another look at language. More specifically, it should take a look at relations across languages: interlingual relations ...
Starting with complex primitives pays off: complicate locally, simplify
... effectively unbounded domain. In contrast, in the CLSG approach, we seek a system with extended (but still finite) domains of locality capable of specifying the linguistic constraints over these extended domains. Thus, recursion does not enter into the specification of the constraints. We call this ...
... effectively unbounded domain. In contrast, in the CLSG approach, we seek a system with extended (but still finite) domains of locality capable of specifying the linguistic constraints over these extended domains. Thus, recursion does not enter into the specification of the constraints. We call this ...
Introduction to frequency and the emergence of linguistic structure
... In another paper influenced by Bybee's "Usage-based Phonology," Bush studies the palatalization of segments across word boundaries in, for example, "would you" > [wudju] as opposed to the absence of such palatalization in sequences such as "good you" (which had been noted by earlier researchers). Bu ...
... In another paper influenced by Bybee's "Usage-based Phonology," Bush studies the palatalization of segments across word boundaries in, for example, "would you" > [wudju] as opposed to the absence of such palatalization in sequences such as "good you" (which had been noted by earlier researchers). Bu ...
Structuralism
... In much the same way, American historian of science Thomas Kuhn addressed the structural formations of science in his seminal work The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. Though less concerned with "episteme", Kuhn nonetheless remarked at how coteries of scientists operated under and applied a sta ...
... In much the same way, American historian of science Thomas Kuhn addressed the structural formations of science in his seminal work The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. Though less concerned with "episteme", Kuhn nonetheless remarked at how coteries of scientists operated under and applied a sta ...
RTF - UDC
... presence of a human mind, assign relevance to linguistic and other types of signals. To summarize, on the one end of interaction we have biological states of the mind/brain, and, on the other, our interlocutor's biological states of the mind/brain. In each of the interactants, these mental states ar ...
... presence of a human mind, assign relevance to linguistic and other types of signals. To summarize, on the one end of interaction we have biological states of the mind/brain, and, on the other, our interlocutor's biological states of the mind/brain. In each of the interactants, these mental states ar ...
The scope of linguistic anthropology - Assets
... 1.2 The study of linguistic practices human existence and, hence, in bringing about particular ways of being-in-theworld. It is such a dynamic view of language that gives linguistic anthropology its unique place in the humanities and the social sciences. 1.2 The study of linguistic practices As a do ...
... 1.2 The study of linguistic practices human existence and, hence, in bringing about particular ways of being-in-theworld. It is such a dynamic view of language that gives linguistic anthropology its unique place in the humanities and the social sciences. 1.2 The study of linguistic practices As a do ...
the sociological repudiation of völkerpsychologie
... Published online in Wiley Interscience (www.interscience.wiley.com). DOI 10.1002 /jhbs.20172 ...
... Published online in Wiley Interscience (www.interscience.wiley.com). DOI 10.1002 /jhbs.20172 ...
Social Theory of International Politics, Chapters 3 and 4
... firm ground to the study of the impact of interests. Since power and interest explanations presuppose ideas, ideas on the one hand and power and interest on the other should not be considered as rival causes. Wendt refuses to be caught in the either/or dilemma between idealism and materialism. “Mate ...
... firm ground to the study of the impact of interests. Since power and interest explanations presuppose ideas, ideas on the one hand and power and interest on the other should not be considered as rival causes. Wendt refuses to be caught in the either/or dilemma between idealism and materialism. “Mate ...
Paper titles and abstracts Dan Arnold: "Perception and the
... precisely contrary thesis about the priority of language, that linguistic and conceptual ability pervades perceptual experience. Even a person who is absorbed in walking across a meadow, he says, and I will return to his example in the next section, will be sufficiently aware of the grass and the cl ...
... precisely contrary thesis about the priority of language, that linguistic and conceptual ability pervades perceptual experience. Even a person who is absorbed in walking across a meadow, he says, and I will return to his example in the next section, will be sufficiently aware of the grass and the cl ...
A Theory of Structure: Duality, Agency, and Transformation
... therefore as secondary or derived. By contrast, semiotically inclined social scientists, most particularly anthropologists, regard culture as the preeminent site of structure. In typical anthropological usage, the term structure is assumed to refer to the realm of culture, except when it is modified ...
... therefore as secondary or derived. By contrast, semiotically inclined social scientists, most particularly anthropologists, regard culture as the preeminent site of structure. In typical anthropological usage, the term structure is assumed to refer to the realm of culture, except when it is modified ...
sewell 1992 - Rochelle Terman
... therefore as secondary or derived. By contrast, semiotically inclined social scientists, most particularly anthropologists, regard culture as the preeminent site of structure. In typical anthropological usage, the term structure is assumed to refer to the realm of culture, except when it is modified ...
... therefore as secondary or derived. By contrast, semiotically inclined social scientists, most particularly anthropologists, regard culture as the preeminent site of structure. In typical anthropological usage, the term structure is assumed to refer to the realm of culture, except when it is modified ...
From Cultural Selection to Genetic Selection: A Framework for the
... have to be answered: first, can the seemingly nonfunctional complexities of grammar – those which have inspired Chomsky’s formal theories – be explained in a functional and empirically viable manner? Second, can we define the general function of language in a non-trivial fashion? As we will show bel ...
... have to be answered: first, can the seemingly nonfunctional complexities of grammar – those which have inspired Chomsky’s formal theories – be explained in a functional and empirically viable manner? Second, can we define the general function of language in a non-trivial fashion? As we will show bel ...
A Theory of Structure: Duality, Agency, and Transformation
... therefore as secondary or derived. By contrast, semiotically inclined social scientists, most particularly anthropologists, regard culture as the preeminent site of structure. In typical anthropological usage, the term structure is assumed to refer to the realm of culture, except when it is modified ...
... therefore as secondary or derived. By contrast, semiotically inclined social scientists, most particularly anthropologists, regard culture as the preeminent site of structure. In typical anthropological usage, the term structure is assumed to refer to the realm of culture, except when it is modified ...
Linguistic Anthropology in 2013: Super-New-Big AMERICAN ANTHROPOLOGIST Angela Reyes Linguistic Anthropology
... to trace how shifts in transnational mobility and developments in new technology result in new kinds of migrants and more complex forms of communication (Arnaut et al. 2012; Blommaert et al. 2012). In this sense, its fundamental premise claims that superdiversity is “there,” happening, and ready to ...
... to trace how shifts in transnational mobility and developments in new technology result in new kinds of migrants and more complex forms of communication (Arnaut et al. 2012; Blommaert et al. 2012). In this sense, its fundamental premise claims that superdiversity is “there,” happening, and ready to ...
Society for Ethnomusicology
... Ruwet's procedures to non-Western music, isolating the distributions and oppositions of a largerinventory of musical properties. Recent excursions into musical structuralism are found in Nattiez (1972a, 1972b) and Asch (1972). The former discussions are programmatic and stress the structuralistparad ...
... Ruwet's procedures to non-Western music, isolating the distributions and oppositions of a largerinventory of musical properties. Recent excursions into musical structuralism are found in Nattiez (1972a, 1972b) and Asch (1972). The former discussions are programmatic and stress the structuralistparad ...
New Paths in the Linguistic Anthropology of Oceania
... (2008, p. 408) have recently noted that one assertion often heard in Oceanic discourse—that one cannot know other people’s thoughts and feelings—can be used productively “to force a rethinking of some fairly settled approaches to topics such as the nature of theories of mind, the role of intention i ...
... (2008, p. 408) have recently noted that one assertion often heard in Oceanic discourse—that one cannot know other people’s thoughts and feelings—can be used productively “to force a rethinking of some fairly settled approaches to topics such as the nature of theories of mind, the role of intention i ...
Norms and Sociolinguistic Description1
... concepts of appropriate and expected behavior. The most basic of these concepts are acquired in early childhood through socialization. In the case of language norms this means that the first language norms adopted are the ones of everyday spoken language. Compared to the prescriptive norms of the st ...
... concepts of appropriate and expected behavior. The most basic of these concepts are acquired in early childhood through socialization. In the case of language norms this means that the first language norms adopted are the ones of everyday spoken language. Compared to the prescriptive norms of the st ...
Learning Morphology by Itself1 - Mediterranean Morphology Meetings
... phonologically weak, often unstressed, word boundary positions. Moreover, they convey fairly abstract and procedural semantic content (i.e. morpho-syntactic properties), having very few if any perceptual correlates in the grounding environment where words are uttered. Finally, when a language offers ...
... phonologically weak, often unstressed, word boundary positions. Moreover, they convey fairly abstract and procedural semantic content (i.e. morpho-syntactic properties), having very few if any perceptual correlates in the grounding environment where words are uttered. Finally, when a language offers ...
Tailoring language provision and requirements
... the reasons why the right to use one’s mother tongue is one of the fundamental human rights.4 From a psycholinguistic point of view it is also very important to emphasise that the mother tongue is also a very important basis for learning any other language successfully – for children as well as for ...
... the reasons why the right to use one’s mother tongue is one of the fundamental human rights.4 From a psycholinguistic point of view it is also very important to emphasise that the mother tongue is also a very important basis for learning any other language successfully – for children as well as for ...
4. Third scenario: Sexual selection and a run
... consisting of a preference for rather spherical brains may be observed in this period before the hominids and apes separated. The second major transition occurred when early hominids adapted to life in the Savannah by behaviors such as walking upright and hunting as groups. Thus the general trend to ...
... consisting of a preference for rather spherical brains may be observed in this period before the hominids and apes separated. The second major transition occurred when early hominids adapted to life in the Savannah by behaviors such as walking upright and hunting as groups. Thus the general trend to ...
PREDICTING DEVELOPMENT OF RESEARCH IN MUSIC BASED ON
... Current research in music concentrates around Music Information Retrieval, both for the signal and symbolic music representations. In most cases it deals on basic issues how computers should deal with music data in general. The level of music interpretation does not go into semantics, probably becau ...
... Current research in music concentrates around Music Information Retrieval, both for the signal and symbolic music representations. In most cases it deals on basic issues how computers should deal with music data in general. The level of music interpretation does not go into semantics, probably becau ...
Phraseology and linguistic theory
... As to the first criterion, the definition of a phraseologism I will adopt is among the broadest conceivable. I consider a phraseologism to be the co-occurrence of a form or a lemma of a lexical item and any other kind of linguistic element, which can be, for example, another (form of a) lexical item ...
... As to the first criterion, the definition of a phraseologism I will adopt is among the broadest conceivable. I consider a phraseologism to be the co-occurrence of a form or a lemma of a lexical item and any other kind of linguistic element, which can be, for example, another (form of a) lexical item ...
Linguistic anthropology: Language as a non
... language use. In one trend, the routine aspects of linguistic encoding are made sense of in terms of mental representations. A popular concept in this approach has been the notion of schema (plural: schemata), an abstract construct with some basic, sketchy elements that allow for the recognition and ...
... language use. In one trend, the routine aspects of linguistic encoding are made sense of in terms of mental representations. A popular concept in this approach has been the notion of schema (plural: schemata), an abstract construct with some basic, sketchy elements that allow for the recognition and ...
Structural Linguistics. General Principles
... resources of the critic in discussing the meaning of texts. Structuralism, says, Genette, "is a study of the cultural construction or identification of meaning according to the relations of signs that constitute the meaning-spectrum of the culture." Greimas defines semiotics as "a hierarchy that can ...
... resources of the critic in discussing the meaning of texts. Structuralism, says, Genette, "is a study of the cultural construction or identification of meaning according to the relations of signs that constitute the meaning-spectrum of the culture." Greimas defines semiotics as "a hierarchy that can ...