Untitled - FIB Unair
... require a theorization and description of both the social processes and structures which give rise to the production of a text, and of the social structures and processes within which individuals or groups as social historical subjects, create meanings in their interaction with texts (Fairclough and ...
... require a theorization and description of both the social processes and structures which give rise to the production of a text, and of the social structures and processes within which individuals or groups as social historical subjects, create meanings in their interaction with texts (Fairclough and ...
Structuring information in discourse: the explicit/implicit
... We agree that speakers can communicate things that are neither fully determined by the semantics of the uttered sentence nor merely conversationally implicated. We may not agree on what this involves or how it is accomplished, and we may disagree on what constitutes sentence semantics, but clearly w ...
... We agree that speakers can communicate things that are neither fully determined by the semantics of the uttered sentence nor merely conversationally implicated. We may not agree on what this involves or how it is accomplished, and we may disagree on what constitutes sentence semantics, but clearly w ...
Argumentation Mining: The Detection, Classification and Structure of
... attracts attention from philosophers, logicians, linguists, legal scholars, speech communication theorists, etc. The theory is grounded in conversational, interpersonal communication, but also applies to group communication and written communication. From our point of view there are three main argum ...
... attracts attention from philosophers, logicians, linguists, legal scholars, speech communication theorists, etc. The theory is grounded in conversational, interpersonal communication, but also applies to group communication and written communication. From our point of view there are three main argum ...
Moral Rationalism and Rational Amoralism
... experience prepared them to see things in the way morality requires. Aristotle might be an example. Still other apparently rational individuals remain unmoved by what they believe right. If this means they are not moved by what they believe is most reasonable to do, the lack of motivation would appe ...
... experience prepared them to see things in the way morality requires. Aristotle might be an example. Still other apparently rational individuals remain unmoved by what they believe right. If this means they are not moved by what they believe is most reasonable to do, the lack of motivation would appe ...
Discourse in Action: Introducing mediated discourse analysis
... percent recycled paper; or the spoken words – the offers, the reminiscences, the debates – we would in fact understand very little about what is going on in these social situations, nor would we understand what these pieces of discourse actually mean. The reason is that the ‘meaning’ does not so muc ...
... percent recycled paper; or the spoken words – the offers, the reminiscences, the debates – we would in fact understand very little about what is going on in these social situations, nor would we understand what these pieces of discourse actually mean. The reason is that the ‘meaning’ does not so muc ...
book - University of Westminster Press
... First, open cultural Marxism can revisit some of the contributions to cultural Marxism in an open manner. The Frankfurt School is an important tradition in cultural Marxism. One should, however, not reify particular traditions or thinkers, but practice an open conversation between various Marxist ap ...
... First, open cultural Marxism can revisit some of the contributions to cultural Marxism in an open manner. The Frankfurt School is an important tradition in cultural Marxism. One should, however, not reify particular traditions or thinkers, but practice an open conversation between various Marxist ap ...
The Metaphorical Construction of Complex Domains: The Case of
... • The source domain of PHYSICAL SUPPORT is applied to the expression of agreement and solidarity with others and their views or proposals (e.g., “Mr Milosevic supported the plan then”). In his work on complex target domains such as friendship and happiness, Kövecses (2000, pp. 87ff.; 2002, pp. 84ff. ...
... • The source domain of PHYSICAL SUPPORT is applied to the expression of agreement and solidarity with others and their views or proposals (e.g., “Mr Milosevic supported the plan then”). In his work on complex target domains such as friendship and happiness, Kövecses (2000, pp. 87ff.; 2002, pp. 84ff. ...
Organizational Behavior, 15e (Robbins/Judge) Chapter 11
... complete a project from a new client. Many of the employees on this team are apprehensive about the structure and dynamics of how they will function as a group and accomplish this goal. To energize the employees, their immediate manager is holding a meeting with them next week where he will provide ...
... complete a project from a new client. Many of the employees on this team are apprehensive about the structure and dynamics of how they will function as a group and accomplish this goal. To energize the employees, their immediate manager is holding a meeting with them next week where he will provide ...
Cornelius Castoriadis on Social Imaginary and Truth*
... See Habermas 1984, 127-83, and more recently with critical references to Rorty: Habermas 1999; see also Rorty 1979. I use the terms “objectivism and “relativism” as defined by R.J. Bernstein: “By ‘objectivism’, I mean the basic conviction that there is or must be some permanent, ahistorical matrix o ...
... See Habermas 1984, 127-83, and more recently with critical references to Rorty: Habermas 1999; see also Rorty 1979. I use the terms “objectivism and “relativism” as defined by R.J. Bernstein: “By ‘objectivism’, I mean the basic conviction that there is or must be some permanent, ahistorical matrix o ...
THE THEORY OF COMMUNICATIVE ACTION
... communicative action linguistic symbols and languagelike symbols in terest him only insofar as they mediate interactions, modes of behavior, and actions of more than one individual. In communicative action, be yond the function of achieving understanding, language plays the role of coordinating th ...
... communicative action linguistic symbols and languagelike symbols in terest him only insofar as they mediate interactions, modes of behavior, and actions of more than one individual. In communicative action, be yond the function of achieving understanding, language plays the role of coordinating th ...
Tattoo: a multifaceted medium of communication Christian Wymann
... Despite their empirical richness and theoretical variety, these studies only seldom provide explicit specifications of the basic phenomena involved. As I want to show briefly, the suggested definitions are not clear or distinct enough to specify the social character of tattooing and tattoos. In part ...
... Despite their empirical richness and theoretical variety, these studies only seldom provide explicit specifications of the basic phenomena involved. As I want to show briefly, the suggested definitions are not clear or distinct enough to specify the social character of tattooing and tattoos. In part ...
prickmag
... Despite their empirical richness and theoretical variety, these studies only seldom provide explicit specifications of the basic phenomena involved. As I want to show briefly, the suggested definitions are not clear or distinct enough to specify the social character of tattooing and tattoos. In part ...
... Despite their empirical richness and theoretical variety, these studies only seldom provide explicit specifications of the basic phenomena involved. As I want to show briefly, the suggested definitions are not clear or distinct enough to specify the social character of tattooing and tattoos. In part ...
A Philosophical History of German Sociology
... thus be summarized as the insight that society is the ‘result of men’s action, but not a human project’ (A. Ferguson). Paradoxically, it is only when the individual is alienated from, and crushed by, his own product that individual and society can become the focus of an objective science. According ...
... thus be summarized as the insight that society is the ‘result of men’s action, but not a human project’ (A. Ferguson). Paradoxically, it is only when the individual is alienated from, and crushed by, his own product that individual and society can become the focus of an objective science. According ...
On the Distinctions between Semantics and Pragmatics
... based on. As far as the distinction between syntax and semantics goes the prevailing view is that syntax disregards meaning in favor of the study of "purely formal phenomena". When it comes to the distinction between semantics and pragmatics this seems mostly to be seen as an abstraction of meaning ...
... based on. As far as the distinction between syntax and semantics goes the prevailing view is that syntax disregards meaning in favor of the study of "purely formal phenomena". When it comes to the distinction between semantics and pragmatics this seems mostly to be seen as an abstraction of meaning ...
Truth, Values, and the Value of Truth in International Relations
... shaping critical international theory because it is understood in epistemic terms. The second stage describes the implications of Critical Realist accounts of truth for this epistemic consensus in IR. It does so in part by examining Heikki Patomaki’s account of Critical Realist truth in After Intern ...
... shaping critical international theory because it is understood in epistemic terms. The second stage describes the implications of Critical Realist accounts of truth for this epistemic consensus in IR. It does so in part by examining Heikki Patomaki’s account of Critical Realist truth in After Intern ...
"Telling the Truth:" Dietrich Bonhoeffer`s Rhetorical
... His vision, like that of key ancient thinkers of rhetoric, is strongly social, and his concept of communication is intensely situational. Likewise, he argues that his normative vision of human sociality is translatable into an art that can be learned through experience, practice, and principle. The ...
... His vision, like that of key ancient thinkers of rhetoric, is strongly social, and his concept of communication is intensely situational. Likewise, he argues that his normative vision of human sociality is translatable into an art that can be learned through experience, practice, and principle. The ...
Lecture 12: Semantics and Pragmatics
... The grounding problem and circularity The boundaries of meaning: linguistic vs encyclopedic knowledge Individual variation in meaning: idiolects Words can be combined to form an infinite number of expressions ∗ This building up of meaning is referred to as composition ∗ If the meaning of the whole c ...
... The grounding problem and circularity The boundaries of meaning: linguistic vs encyclopedic knowledge Individual variation in meaning: idiolects Words can be combined to form an infinite number of expressions ∗ This building up of meaning is referred to as composition ∗ If the meaning of the whole c ...
PDF
... Even when expanded to allow for altruism or to capture fairness concerns, simple game-theoretic models do not permit clear predictions of why the process for decisionmaking should affect ethical outcomes. We apply the modelling techniques of Fehr and Schmidt (1999) and discuss Rabin (1995).5 Heterog ...
... Even when expanded to allow for altruism or to capture fairness concerns, simple game-theoretic models do not permit clear predictions of why the process for decisionmaking should affect ethical outcomes. We apply the modelling techniques of Fehr and Schmidt (1999) and discuss Rabin (1995).5 Heterog ...
The Discourses of OERs: how flat is this world?
... and discourses from a social perspective, and how language figures in processes of social change. Kress (1990) argues that CDA has an overtly political agenda and it is what differentiates CDA from other types of discourse analysis. He points out that CDA does not only provide accounts for the produ ...
... and discourses from a social perspective, and how language figures in processes of social change. Kress (1990) argues that CDA has an overtly political agenda and it is what differentiates CDA from other types of discourse analysis. He points out that CDA does not only provide accounts for the produ ...
LIN1180 Semantics
... is not cancelled by negation (unlike entailment) can fail (as in the present King of France) can be triggered by a syntactic construction or a lexical item but this is strongly sensitive to linguistic context can be projected by a subordinate clause to the main clause again, depends on t ...
... is not cancelled by negation (unlike entailment) can fail (as in the present King of France) can be triggered by a syntactic construction or a lexical item but this is strongly sensitive to linguistic context can be projected by a subordinate clause to the main clause again, depends on t ...
The substitutional theory of logical consequence
... this depends on a certain understanding of necessity: If we understand necessity as formal or logical necessity, then necessary truth preservation is a sufficient condition for formal validity. However, tweaking the notion of necessity in this way runs the risk of becoming circular: Logical necessit ...
... this depends on a certain understanding of necessity: If we understand necessity as formal or logical necessity, then necessary truth preservation is a sufficient condition for formal validity. However, tweaking the notion of necessity in this way runs the risk of becoming circular: Logical necessit ...
Social Psychological Models Of Interpersonal
... understanding of the social process was defective because it rested on inappropriate assumptions about the underlying cognitive process. In a similar way, contemporary social psychologists who assume that communication is involved in the phenomena they study, but do not consider the specific details ...
... understanding of the social process was defective because it rested on inappropriate assumptions about the underlying cognitive process. In a similar way, contemporary social psychologists who assume that communication is involved in the phenomena they study, but do not consider the specific details ...
SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGICAL MODELS OF
... understanding of the social process was defective because it rested on inappropriate assumptions about the underlying cognitive process. In a similar way, contemporary social psychologists who assume that communication is involved in the phenomena they study, but do not consider the specific details ...
... understanding of the social process was defective because it rested on inappropriate assumptions about the underlying cognitive process. In a similar way, contemporary social psychologists who assume that communication is involved in the phenomena they study, but do not consider the specific details ...
apontamentos iniciais sobre a situação desta área no brasil
... action’s agent. Habermas will prioritize, to understand the human being in society, the actions of communicative nature. That is, the actions related to the intervention in the dialogue between various subjects. It is therefore a theory of communicative action. The habermasian fundamental categories ...
... action’s agent. Habermas will prioritize, to understand the human being in society, the actions of communicative nature. That is, the actions related to the intervention in the dialogue between various subjects. It is therefore a theory of communicative action. The habermasian fundamental categories ...
Universal pragmatics
Universal pragmatics, more recently placed under the heading of formal pragmatics, is the philosophical study of the necessary conditions for reaching an understanding through communication. The philosopher Jürgen Habermas coined the term in his essay ""What is Universal Pragmatics?"" (Habermas 1979), where he suggests that human competition, conflict, and strategic action are attempts to achieve understanding that have failed because of modal confusions. The implication is that coming to terms with how people understand or misunderstand one another could lead to a reduction of social conflict.By coming to an ""understanding,"" he means at the very least, when two or more social actors share the same meanings about certain words or phrases; and at the very most, when these actors are confident that those meanings fit relevant social expectations (or a ""mutually recognized normative background""). (1979:3)For Habermas, the goal of coming to an understanding is ""intersubjective mutuality ... shared knowledge, mutual trust, and accord with one another"". (1979:3) In other words, the underlying goal of coming to an understanding would help to foster the enlightenment, consensus, and good will necessary for establishing socially beneficial norms. Habermas' goal is not primarily for subjective feeling alone, but for development of shared (intersubjective) norms which in turn establish the social coordination needed for practical action in pursuit of shared and individual objectives. (See Communicative action of 1983)As an interdisciplinary subject, universal pragmatics draws upon material from a large number of fields, from pragmatics, semantics, semiotics, informal logic, and the philosophy of language, through social philosophy, sociology, and symbolic interactionism, to ethics, especially discourse ethics, and on to epistemology and the philosophy of mind.