The average rating for Deixis, Grammar, and Culture based on 2 reviews is 3.5 stars.
Review # 1 was written on 2014-09-25 00:00:00 Michael Foster This book lays out the various cognitive systems which were developed by philosophers and philologists after Kantian and Hegelian dialectics and before Saussurian structuralism decayed into behaviorist anti-mentalism. Although the different theories vary a bit, they all seem to stem from the abductive synthesis. Meaning emerges as a dialectical process between empirical induction (meaning comes from out there) and rational deduction (meaning comes from our innate powers of reason). So meaning functions like the Hermeneutical circle: meaning becomes a projection of inner experience (through words) that is also tempered and refined by the various semantic inputs which we are exposed to. I read this book in the early 90s, and all the theories have merged in my memory as a proto-Heidegger. But I do remember being impressed at the amount of cognitive system building that went on in the 19th century. However, there is no treatment of grammar per se. |
Review # 2 was written on 2013-04-11 00:00:00 Brent Cochran such a great book to read... |
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