Results for ' reading grammar'

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  1.  19
    Sophisms in Medieval Logic and Grammar: Acts of the Ninth European Symposium for Medieval Logic and Semantics, Held at St Andrews, June 1990.Stephen Read (ed.) - 1993 - Dordrecht and Boston: Springer.
    This book presents the very latest research on the medieval use of sophisms in logical and grammatical investigation by twenty-three of the leading experts in Europe and beyond. Important insights into the genre of sophismatic treatises have been gained only very recently, and the organisation of the European Symposium on this topic in 1990 led to a concentration of research and evaluation of insights. The papers are divided into three groups: one covers textual study and analysis of the role of (...)
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  2.  34
    On Delusions of Sense: A Response to Coetzee and Sass.Rupert J. Read - 2003 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 10 (2):135-141.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Philosophy, Psychiatry, & Psychology 10.2 (2003) 135-141 [Access article in PDF] On Delusions of Sense:A Response to Coetzee and Sass Rupert Read Keywords schizophrenia, Wittgenstein, Schreber, Faulkner, Benjy, grammar, madness, Cogito The great writings on and of severe mental affliction—those for instance of Schreber, 'Renee', Donna Williams, Artaud, Faulkner's The Sound and the Fury, Coetzee's In the Heart of the Country, Kafka's "Description of a struggle," and even (...)
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  3.  50
    Time to stop trying to provide an account of time.Rupert Read - 2003 - Philosophy 78 (3):397-408.
    Dummett argues that there are difficulties with existing accounts of time, and urges us to consider the merits of his alternative ‘constructionist’ account. He derides my opting out of the debate between him and his Realist opponents as “quietist”. But the epithet “quietist” only works if there actually is some genuine topic on which I am staying quiet (or silencing others). Whereas I simply urge that, while Dummett has correctly identified difficulties with Realist accounts of time, he does not have (...)
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  4.  23
    Wittgenstein and the Grammar of Literary Experience by James Guetti. [REVIEW]Rupert Read - 1995 - British Journal of Aesthetics 35 (4):412-413.
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  5.  8
    Georgian: A Reading Grammar.S. Peter Cowe & Howard I. Aronson - 1988 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 108 (2):322.
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  6. The Grammar of "Esse": Re-reading Thomas on the Transcendentals.Mark Jordan - 1980 - The Thomist 44 (1):1.
     
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  7.  7
    Reading Latin - Peter V. Jones, Keith C. Sidwell: Reading Latin. 2 vols. Text: pp. xvi+160; 77 illustrations; Grammar, Vocabulary and Exercises: pp. xxiii + 610; illustrations. Cambridge University Press, 1986. £5.95 (Text); £9.95 (Grammar, etc.). [REVIEW]W. A. Williams - 1987 - The Classical Review 37 (2):234-235.
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  8.  35
    Reading Latin - Peter V. Jones, Keith C. Sidwell: Reading Latin. 2 vols. Text: pp. xvi+160; 77 illustrations; Grammar, Vocabulary and Exercises: pp. xxiii + 610; illustrations. Cambridge University Press, 1986. £5.95 ; £9.95. [REVIEW]W. A. Williams - 1987 - The Classical Review 37 (2):234-235.
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  9.  22
    Reading Latin - Peter V. Jones, Keith C. Sidwell: Reading Latin. 2 vols. Text: pp. xvi+160; 77 illustrations; Grammar, Vocabulary and Exercises: pp. xxiii + 610; illustrations. Cambridge University Press, 1986. £5.95 (Text); £9.95 (Grammar, etc.). [REVIEW]W. A. Williams - 1987 - The Classical Review 37 (2):234-235.
  10.  13
    Risking Catachresis: Reading Race, Reference, and Grammar in “Women”.Christina A. León - 2021 - Diacritics 49 (1):61-71.
  11.  40
    Reading Greek Reading Greek: the Joint Association of Classical Teachers' Greek Course. Vol. i Text, vol. ii Grammar, Vocabulary and Exercises. Pp. xvi + 182, x + 366. Cambridge University Press, 1978. Paper. [REVIEW]H. J. K. Usher - 1980 - The Classical Review 30 (01):70-77.
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  12.  54
    The Preferences of al-Kisāʾī : Grammar and Meaning in a Canonical Reading of the Qur’an.Ramon Harvey - 2016 - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 29 (2):313-332.
    The Qur’an has been transmitted as both a written text and an oral recital. This has led to the development of a reading tradition that permits numerous different vocalisations to be made upon the basic skeletal text of the established ʿUthmānī codex. Ibn al-Jazarī chose ten early readers whom he felt were most representative of this tradition and whose readings are treated as canonical up until this day. One of these, the Kufan linguist al-Kisāʾī has been characterised in the (...)
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  13. The grammar of criminal law: American, comparative, and international.George P. Fletcher - 2007 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    The Grammar of Criminal Law is a 3-volume work that addresses the field of international and comparative criminal law, with its primary focus on the issues of international concern, ranging from genocide, to domestic efforts to combat terrorism, to torture, and to other international crimes. The first volume is devoted to foundational issues. The Grammar of Criminal Law is unique in its systematic emphasis on the relationship between language and legal theory; there is no comparable comparative study of (...)
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  14. Lambda Grammars and the Syntax-Semantics Interface.Reinhard Muskens - 2001 - In Robert Van Rooij & Martin Stokhof (eds.), Proceedings of the Thirteenth Amsterdam Colloquium. Amsterdam: ILLC. pp. 150-155.
    In this paper we discuss a new perspective on the syntax-semantics interface. Semantics, in this new set-up, is not ‘read off’ from Logical Forms as in mainstream approaches to generative grammar. Nor is it assigned to syntactic proofs using a Curry-Howard correspondence as in versions of the Lambek Calculus, or read off from f-structures using Linear Logic as in Lexical-Functional Grammar (LFG, Kaplan & Bresnan [9]). All such approaches are based on the idea that syntactic objects (trees, proofs, (...)
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  15.  42
    (P.J.) Jones (ed.) Reading Greek. Text and Vocabulary. (The Joint Association of Classical Teachers' Greek Course.) Second Edition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007 (first edition, 1978). Paper, £17.99, US$32.99. ISBN: 978-0-521-69851-1. - (P.J.) Jones (ed.) Reading Greek. Grammar and Exercises. (The Joint Association of Classical Teachers' Greek Course.) Second Edition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007 (first edition, 1978). Paper, £19.99, US$34.99. ISBN: 978-0-521-69852-8. [REVIEW]Diana J. Barclay - 2009 - The Classical Review 59 (1):311-.
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  16.  94
    Cognitive Grammar.John R. Taylor - 2002 - Oxford University Press UK.
    Cognitive Grammar offers a radical alternative to mainstream linguistic theories. This book introduces the theory in clear, non-technical language, relates it to current debates about the nature of linguistic knowledge, and applies it to in-depth analyses of a range of topics in semantics, syntax, morphology, and phonology. Study questions and suggestions for further reading accompany each of the main chapters.
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  17.  9
    Fuzzy Grammar:A Reader: A Reader.Bas Aarts, David Denison, Evelien Keizer & Gergana Popova (eds.) - 2004 - Oxford University Press UK.
    This book brings together classic and recent papers in the philosophical and linguistic analysis of fuzzy grammar, gradience in meaning, word classes, and syntax. Issues such as how many grains make a heap, when a puddle becomes a pond, and so forth, have occupied thinkers since Aristotle and over the last two decades been the subject of increasing interest among linguists as well as in fields such as artificial intelligence and computational linguistics. The work is designed to be of (...)
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  18.  11
    Argumentationstheorie: Scholastische Forschungen zu den logischen und semantischen Regelen korrekten Folgerns by Klaus Jacobi; Sophisms in Medieval Logic and Grammar by Stephen Read.John Murdoch - 1995 - Isis 86:632-633.
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  19.  15
    Argumentationstheorie: Scholastische Forschungen zu den logischen und semantischen Regelen korrekten Folgerns. Klaus JacobiSophisms in Medieval Logic and Grammar. Stephen Read.John E. Murdoch - 1995 - Isis 86 (4):632-633.
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  20.  15
    The Grammar of Interactional Language.Martina Wiltschko - 2021 - Cambridge University Press.
    Traditional grammar and current theoretical approaches towards modelling grammatical knowledge ignore language in interaction: that is, words such as huh, eh, yup or yessssss. This groundbreaking book addresses this gap by providing the first in-depth overview of approaches towards interactional language across different frameworks and linguistic sub-disciplines. Based on the insights that emerge, a formal framework is developed to discover and compare language in interaction across different languages: the interactional spine hypothesis. Two case-studies are presented: confirmationals and response markers, (...)
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  21.  12
    Heeding Grammar and Language-games: Continuing Conversations with Wittgenstein and Roth.Sam Gardner & Steve Alsop - 2020 - Outlines. Critical Practice Studies 21 (1):34-48.
    This paper continues a conversation about Wittgenstein’s picture of language and meaning and its potential applications for educational theorising. It takes the form of a response to Wolff-Michael Roth’s earlier paper “Heeding Wittgenstein on “understanding” and “meaning”: A pragmatist and concrete human psychological approach in/for education,” in which Roth problematizes the use of the terms “understanding” and “meaning” in education discourse and proposes their abandonment. Whilst we agree with Roth about a series of central points, at the same time we (...)
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  22.  22
    Storytelling as Grammars of Listening.María del Rosario Acosta López - 2022 - Journal of Continental Philosophy 3 (1):135-157.
    This paper proposes a reading of Walter Benjamin’s “The Storyteller” in connection to what Nelly Richard, in her diagnosis of traumatic forms of violence, has called “catastrophes of meaning.” Written, like Freud’s theory of trauma, in the wake of the first World War, I argue that Benjamin sees in storytelling the experience of an imparting or communication (Mitteilung) capable of conveying trauma without betraying its paradox—and thus, without either interpreting its excesses as meaningless or reducing its absences to mere (...)
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  23.  8
    Grammar and Grace: Reformulations of Aquinas and Wittgenstein.Jeffrey Stout & Robert MacSwain - 2004 - SCM Press.
    This book is a collection of new essays on Aquinas and Wittgenstein written by some of the leading theologians and philosophers of religion in the English-speaking world. It is inspired by ' and dedicated to the memory of - Victor Preller, whose powerful interpretations of these figures did much to prepare the ground for recent discussions of religious language, knowledge of God, the role of grace in human life, and the ethical significance of virtue. Grammar and Grace frees Aquinas (...)
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  24.  68
    Contemplative Grammars: Śaṅkara’s Distinction of Upāsana and Nididhyāsana.Neil Dalal - 2016 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 44 (1):179-206.
    Śaṅkara’s Advaita Vedānta is largely dismissive of ritual action, in part because the metaphysical position of non-duality erodes any independent existence of the individual as a ritual agent, and because knowledge of non-duality is thought to be independent of action. However, a close reading of Śaṅkara shows that he does accept forms of devotional practice that have remained largely marginalized in studies of Advaita Vedānta. This article compares and contrasts contemplative devotion, in the form of visualized meditations on īśvara, (...)
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  25.  76
    Universal Grammar.Jim Vernon - 2007 - The Owl of Minerva 39 (1-2):1-24.
    In this paper, through Hegel’s account of the predicative judgment in the Greater Logic, I develop an immanent, presuppositionless deduction ofgrammatical form from the very idea of language in general. In other words, I argue that Hegel’s account of the judgment can be read as a demonstrationof a truly universal (rather than empirically “common” or “general”) grammar through which any and all determinate thought must be expressed. In so doing, I seek to resolve the problem that linguistic contingency poses (...)
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  26.  15
    Universal Grammar.Jim Vernon - 2007 - The Owl of Minerva 39 (1-2):1-24.
    In this paper, through Hegel’s account of the predicative judgment in the Greater Logic, I develop an immanent, presuppositionless deduction ofgrammatical form from the very idea of language in general. In other words, I argue that Hegel’s account of the judgment can be read as a demonstrationof a truly universal (rather than empirically “common” or “general”) grammar through which any and all determinate thought must be expressed. In so doing, I seek to resolve the problem that linguistic contingency poses (...)
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  27.  23
    Phenomenology as Grammar.Jesús Padilla Gálvez (ed.) - 2008 - Berlin, Boston: Ontos.
    This volume gathers papers, which were read at the congress held at the University of Castilla-La Mancha in Toledo (Spain), in September 2007, under the general subject of phenomenology. The book is devoted to Wittgenstein’s thoughts on phenomenology. One of its aims is to consider and examine the lasting importance of phenomenology for philosophic discussion. For E. Husserl phenomenology was a discipline that endeavoured to describe how the world is constituted and experienced through a series of conscious acts. His fundamental (...)
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  28.  75
    Readings In Philosophy Of Psychology, V.Ned Block (ed.) - 1981 - Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
    Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and ... V. Influence of imaged pictures and sounds on detection of visual and auditory signals. ...
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  29.  5
    Phenomenology as Grammar.Jesús Padilla Gálvez (ed.) - 2008 - Heusenstamm [Germany]: De Gruyter.
    This volume gathers papers, which were read at the congress held at the University of Castilla-La Mancha in Toledo (Spain), in September 2007, under the general subject of phenomenology. The book is devoted to Wittgenstein s thoughts on phenomenology. One of its aims is to consider and examine the lasting importance of phenomenology for philosophic discussion. For E. Husserl phenomenology was a discipline that endeavoured to describe how the world is constituted and experienced through a series of conscious acts. His (...)
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  30.  37
    Reviews - Noam Chomsky. Syntactic structures. Janua linguarum, Studia memoriae Nicolai van Wijk dedicata, series minor no. 4. Mouton & Co., ‘s-Gravenhage1957, 116 pp. - Noam Chomsky. Three models for the description of language. A reprint of XXIII 71. Readings in mathematical psychology, volume II, edited by R. Duncan Luce, Robert R. Bush, and Eugene Galanter, John Wiley and Sons, Inc., New York, London, and Sydney, 1965, pp. 105–124. - Noam Chomsky. Logical structures in language. American documentation, vol. 8 , pp. 284–291. - Noam Chomsky and George A. Miller. Finite state languages. Information and control, vol. 1 , pp. 91–112. Reprinted in Readings in mathematical psychology, volume II, edited by R. Duncan Luce, Robert R. Bush, and Eugene Galanter, John Wiley and Sons, Inc., New York, London, and Sydney, 1965, pp. 156–171. - Noam Chomsky. On certain formal properties of grammars. Information and control, vol. 2 , pp. 137–167. Reprinted in Readings in mathematical psychology, volum. [REVIEW]J. F. Staal - 1966 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 31 (2):245-251.
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  31.  32
    The grammar of domination and the subjection of agency: Colonial texts and modes of evidence.Premesh Lalu - 2000 - History and Theory 39 (4):45–68.
    This article focuses on colonial accounts of the killing of the Xhosa chief, Hintsa, in 1835 at the hands of British forces along what came to be known as the eastern Cape frontier. It explores the evidentiary procedures and protocols through which the event came to be narrated in colonial frames of intelligibility. In proposing a strategy for reading the colonial archive, the paper strategically interrupts the flow from an apartheid historiography to what is commonly referred to as "alternative (...)
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  32.  26
    Wittgenstein on rules: justification, grammar, and agreement.James R. Shaw - 2023 - New York, NY, United States of America: Oxford University Press.
    The goal of this book is to develop a new approach to reading the rule-following sections guided by a simple idea. The simple idea is that Wittgenstein's remarks on rule-following are split between two distinct but complementary projects. The projects are marked not only by different guiding questions, but different presuppositions and methodologies. There is of course precedent for reading the rule-following remarks as comprising two parts. For example, there is the reading of (S. Kripke 1982) on (...)
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  33.  50
    Silent Reading and Conceptual Confusion.James McGray - 2013 - Journal of Philosophical Research 38:323-332.
    Silent reading is markedly different from loud reading. For loud reading it is necessary that the spoken words match the printed or written words in accord with rules of pronunciation and grammar. Ordinarily, a loud reader can repeat or describe what he has read, but the acquisition of this ability is not necessary for loud reading. However, for silent reading it is necessary that the reader can repeat or describe the printed or written words (...)
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  34.  13
    Silent Reading and Conceptual Confusion.James McGray - 2013 - Journal of Philosophical Research 38:323-332.
    Silent reading is markedly different from loud reading. For loud reading it is necessary that the spoken words match the printed or written words in accord with rules of pronunciation and grammar. Ordinarily, a loud reader can repeat or describe what he has read, but the acquisition of this ability is not necessary for loud reading. However, for silent reading it is necessary that the reader can repeat or describe the printed or written words (...)
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  35. Sensation and the Grammar of Life: Anscombe’s Procedure and her Purpose.Clare Mac Cumhaill & Rachael Wiseman - forthcoming - In Heather Logue and Louise Richardson (ed.), Purpose and Procedure in Philosophy of Perception.
    Anscombe’s published writings, lectures and notes on sensation point toward a sophisticated critique of sense-data, representationalist and direct realist theories of perception (in both their historical and contemporary forms), and a novel analysis of the concept of sensation. Her philosophy of perception begins with the traditional question, ‘What are the objects of sensation?’, but the response is a grammatical rather than ontological enquiry. What, she asks, are the characteristics of the grammatical object of sensation verbs? Anscombe’s answer is: sensation verbs (...)
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  36. Intentionality and Pure Logical Grammar in Husserl's Theory of Meaning.Terrence C. Wright - 1992 - Dissertation, Bryn Mawr College
    This dissertation concerns Edmund Husserl's theory of meaning. It focuses on Husserl's position as it develops from the Logical Investigations, published in 1900-01, through the writing of the Ideas in 1913. ;I argue that there are two theories of meaning at operation in Husserl's thinking in the Logical Investigations. One which is based upon the theory of pure logical grammar, the other based upon the theory of intentional acts of consciousness. I also consider the way in which Husserl's employs (...)
     
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  37.  9
    Quranic Reading Between the High-Level Chain of Transmission and Criticism of Grammarians.Sahar Husein Jarallah Almalki - 2023 - European Journal for Philosophy of Religion 15 (3):296-315.
    This research delves into a unique and vital aspect of addressing criticisms by some grammarians (al-nohaat) and interpreters against various continuous Quranic readings, focusing on the robustness of their transmission chains (isnad). These chains, often deemed weak by certain grammarians, are examined to understand how they reinforce the credibility of the readings, given the prevalent view that a solid transmission chain significantly minimizes errors in recitations. The data was collected through desk review of library sources, references, journal articles and books. (...)
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  38.  32
    Readings of scalar particles: noch / still.Sigrid Beck - 2020 - Linguistics and Philosophy 43 (1):1-67.
    The paper develops a uniform compositional analysis of the various readings of the scalar particle still and its German counterpart noch. Noch/still is a presuppositional scalar particle that gives rise to implicatures. Interpretive possibilities arise through different choices for the scale that the particle associates with, different attachment sites in the syntax, and interaction with focus. These interpretive parameters allow for a wide range of possible sentence interpretations, which overlap, but do not coincide for still and noch. The contrastive perspective (...)
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  39.  6
    Prolegomena to a Critical Grammar.Josef Schächter - 1973 - Dordrecht, Netherland: Springer.
    This book is the first English version of Prolegomena zu einer kritischen Grammatik, published by Julius Springer, Vienna, 1935, as Volume 10 of the Vienna Circle's series Schriften zur wissenschaftlichen Weltauffassung. The prefatory remarks of both editor and author acknowledge the influence ofWittgenstein in a general way. However, in aim and approach, the work differs from Wittgenstein's Philosophische Grammatik. This is indeed based on material going back to 1932, some of which Schachter must have known. On the other hand, the (...)
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  40.  10
    Toward a Grammar of Abstraction: Modernity, Wittgenstein, and the Paintings of Jackson Pollock.Robert Steiner - 1992 - Pennsylvania State University Press.
    _Toward a Grammar ofion_ takes as its point of departure three features of modern art reading: the practice of translating the visual into institutional language, the vocabulary of representation in relation to abstract art, and the prevalence of totality as a model of art-historical knowledge.
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  41.  41
    Toward discourse representation via pregroup grammars.Anne Preller - 2007 - Journal of Logic, Language and Information 16 (2):173-194.
    Every pregroup grammar is shown to be strongly equivalent to one which uses basic types and left and right adjoints of basic types only. Therefore, a semantical interpretation is independent of the order of the associated logic. Lexical entries are read as expressions in a two sorted predicate logic with ∈ and functional symbols. The parsing of a sentence defines a substitution that combines the expressions associated to the individual words. The resulting variable free formula is the translation of (...)
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  42.  16
    Foundations of Language: Brain, Meaning, Grammar, Evolution.Ray Jackendoff - 2002 - Oxford University Press UK.
    Already hailed as a masterpiece, Foundations of Language offers a brilliant overhaul of the last thirty-five years of research in generative linguistics and related fields. "Few books really deserve the cliché 'this should be read by every researcher in the field'," writes Steven Pinker, author of The Language Instinct, "but Ray Jackendoff's Foundations of Language does." Foundations of Language offers a radically new understanding of how language, the brain, and perception intermesh. The book renews the promise of early generative linguistics: (...)
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  43. Scope and the grammar of choice.Donka F. Farkas & Adrian Brasoveanu - unknown
    and Data The essence of scope in natural language semantics can be characterized as follows: an expression e1 takes scope over an expression e2 iff the interpretation of the former affects the interpretation of the latter. Consider, for example, the sentence in (1) below, which is typical of the cases discussed in this paper in that it involves an indefinite and a universal (or, more generally, a non-existential) quantifier. (1) Everyx student in my class read ay paper about scope. How (...)
     
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  44.  34
    A Principled Approach to Grammars for Controlled Natural Languages and Predictive Editors.Tobias Kuhn - 2013 - Journal of Logic, Language and Information 22 (1):33-70.
    Controlled natural languages (CNL) with a direct mapping to formal logic have been proposed to improve the usability of knowledge representation systems, query interfaces, and formal specifications. Predictive editors are a popular approach to solve the problem that CNLs are easy to read but hard to write. Such predictive editors need to be able to “look ahead” in order to show all possible continuations of a given unfinished sentence. Such lookahead features, however, are difficult to implement in a satisfying way (...)
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  45. Strict Readings.Ken Safir - manuscript
    This essay is a contribution to the discussion, now going on for many years, concerning what sorts of identity relations should be represented in the syntax and semantics of formal grammar and what properties those relations should have. In what follows, I will use the neutral cover term coconstrual to refer identity relations of one sort or another between nominals when no particular syntactic or semantic analysis is presupposed (among which are dependent identity, covaluation and coreference). The central claim (...)
     
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  46.  20
    The Question of Wittgensteinian Thomism: Grammar and Metaphysics.Michael Hall - 2024 - Southwest Philosophy Review 40 (1):217-228.
    Wittgensteinian Thomism (WT) proposes a post-Wittgensteinian reading of Aquinas based on the presence of genuine affinities between them in philosophical anthropology, epistemology, philosophy of mind, action theory, and ethics. While this proposal has been historically fruitful in the works of Elizabeth Anscombe, Peter Geach, Anthony Kenny, and Herbert McCabe, there is a significant difficulty in the prima facie incompatibility in the respective attitudes towards metaphysics between Wittgenstein and Aquinas. This calls into question the very coherence of the WT proposal. (...)
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  47.  82
    Readings on Edmund Husserl's Logical investigations.Jitendranath Mohanty (ed.) - 1977 - The Hague: M. Nijhoff.
    Frege, G. Review of Dr. E. Husserl 's Philosophy of arithmetic.--Mohanty, J. N. Husserl and Frege.-- Husserl, E. A Reply to a critic of my refutation of logical psychologism.--Willard, D. The Paradox of logical psychologism.--Natorp, P. On the question of logical method.--Næss, A. Husserl on the apodictic evidence of ideal laws.--Mohanty, J. N. Husserl 's thesis of the ideality of meanings.--Atwell, J. E. Husserl on signification and object.--Sokolowski, R. The logic of parts and wholes in Husserl 's Investigations.--Gurwitsch, A. Outlines (...)
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  48.  17
    Category Mistakes and Logical Grammar.John K. O’Connor - 2012 - Symposium: Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy/Revue canadienne de philosophie continentale 16 (2):235-250.
    Gilbert Ryle never pursued research under Edmund Husserl. However, Ryle was indeed Husserl’s student in a broader sense, as much of his own work was deeply influenced by his studies of Husserl’s pre-World War I writings. While Ryle is the thinker whose name typically comes to mind in connection with the concern over category mistakes I argue that (1) Husserl deserves to be known for precisely this concern as well, and (2) the similarity between them is no accident. Developing this (...)
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  49. Wittgenstein's private language: Grammar, nonsense, and imagination in philosophical investigations, §§243-315 (review). [REVIEW]Marie McGinn - 2010 - Philosophy and Literature 34 (1):pp. 265-269.
    The primary concern of Stephen Mulhall's book is to investigate an interpretation of Wittgenstein's remarks on private language, associated paradigmatically with Norman Malcolm. On this reading, the grammar of our ordinary concepts of language, reference, meaning, rule, etc. is held to prohibit or exclude the idea of a private language. The attempt to give expression to the idea is held to result in a violation of the grammar of these concepts, which connects them essentially with the idea (...)
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  50. Category Mistakes and Logical Grammar: Ryle's Husserlian Tutelage.John K. O’Connor - 2012 - Symposium: Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy/Revue canadienne de philosophie continentale 16 (2):235-250.
    Gilbert Ryle never pursued research under Edmund Husserl. However, Ryle was indeed Husserl’s student in a broader sense, as much of his own work was deeply influenced by his studies of Husserl’s pre-World War I writings. While Ryle is the thinker whose name typically comes to mind in connection with the concern over category mistakes I argue that (1) Husserl deserves to be known for precisely this concern as well, and (2) the similarity between them is no accident. Developing this (...)
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