Results for 'Basque language History'

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  1.  20
    The influence of culture on political choices: Language maintenance and its implications for the Catalan and Basque national movements.Daniele Conversi - 1993 - History of European Ideas 16 (1-3):189-200.
  2. Howard Adelman and Elazar Barkan. No Return, No Refuge: Rites and Rights in Minority Repatriation (New York: Columbia University Press, 2011), xviii+ 340 pp. $39.50/£ 27.50 cloth. Nicholas Atkin, Michael Biddiss, and Frank Tallett. The Wiley-Blackwell Dictionary of Modern European History since 1789 (Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell, 2011), xxxvi+ 473. [REVIEW]Victor Ginsburgh, Shlomo Weber How Many Languages Do & We Need - 2012 - The European Legacy 17 (4):573-575.
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  3.  37
    Jurilinguistics and Minority Languages: General Framework, Methodological Approach and the Case of the Basque Language.Andrés M. Urrutia - 2020 - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 35 (2):391-408.
    Inside the interdisciplinary field of Jurilinguistics, the main research has been carried out on state languages like English, French, German or Spanish. However, there is a new reality in today´s world, namely the existence of minority languages that have arisen to an official status as sub-state languages for the law and a limited range of branches of the law to be the own way to express themselves. The jurilinguistical point of view of this new reality requires a new approach to (...)
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  4.  5
    Explaining how Wikipedia deals with credibility to university students: the case of Wikipedia in the Basque language.Eneko Bidegain, Txema Egaña & Aitor Zuberogoitia - forthcoming - Journal of Information, Communication and Ethics in Society.
    Purpose This study aims to analyse how first-year undergraduate audiovisual communication students assess the credibility and reliability of information on Wikipedia in Basque and analyse whether the experience of being a Wikipedia editor helps to improve students’ perceptions of Wikipedia’s trustworthiness. The purpose of this project was to help students to better understand the credibility mechanisms of Wikipedia in Basque regarding the work of editing and creating entries. Do students’ perceptions about how reliable Wikipedia is change if they (...)
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  5. Reason, language, history: Pragmatism's contested promise.Serge Grigoriev - 2022 - Metaphilosophy 53 (4):431-445.
  6. English-language history and the creation of historical paradigm.Catherine Merridale - 1996 - History of the Human Sciences 9 (4):81-98.
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  7.  7
    Language, History and the Making of Accurate Observations.Anastasios Brenner - 2021 - In Wenceslao J. Gonzalez (ed.), Language and Scientific Research. Springer Verlag. pp. 149-168.
    The aim of this paper is to study scientific observation from a broad perspective, taking into account history, practice and philosophical reflexivity. I shall draw on a series of new approaches variously termed: historical epistemology, history of philosophy of science, science studies, etc. Such approaches were undoubtedly sparked by the difficulties that philosophy of science encountered: if the idea of a neutral language of observation has been abandoned, debate remains as to the character and degree of the (...)
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  8. Heidegger and Dilthey: Language, History, and Hermeneutics.Eric S. Nelson - 2014 - In Megan Altman Hans Pedersen (ed.), Horizons of Authenticity in Phenomenology, Existentialism, and Moral Psychology. springer. pp. 109-128.
    The hermeneutical tradition represented by Yorck, Heidegger, and Gadamer has distrusted Dilthey as suffering from the two sins of modernism: scientific “positivism” and individualistic and aesthetic “romanticism.” On the one hand, Dilthey’s epistemology is deemed scientistic in accepting the priority of the empirical, the ontic, and consequently scientific inquiry into the physical, biological, and human worlds; on the other hand, his personalist ethos and Goethean humanism, and his pluralistic life- and worldview philosophy are considered excessively aesthetic, culturally liberal, relativistic, and (...)
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  9.  80
    Language, history and anthropology.Johannes Fabian - 1971 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 1 (1):19-47.
  10. Las ideas lingüísticas vascas en el s. XVI: Zaldibia, Garibay, Poza.Zubiaur Bilbao & José Ramón - 1990 - San Sebastián, Spain: Cuadernos Universitarios (E.U.T.G.--Mundaiz).
     
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  11.  14
    Truth as Disclosure: Art, Language, History.Charles Guignon - 1990 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 28 (S1):105-120.
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  12.  57
    Truth as disclosure: Art, language, history.Charles Guignon - 1990 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 28 (S1):105-120.
  13.  15
    Contributions on Tibetan Language, History and Culture; Contributions on Tibetan and Buddhist Religion and Philosophy.Mark Tatz, Ernst Steinkellner & Helmut Tauscher - 1997 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 117 (3):576.
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  14.  7
    Language typologies in our language use: The case of Basque motion events in adult oral narratives.Iraide Ibarretxe-Antuñano - 2004 - Cognitive Linguistics 15 (3).
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  15. Truth, language and history.Donald Davidson - 2005 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Truth, Language, and History is the much-anticipated final volume of Donald Davidson's philosophical writings. In four groups of essays, Davidson continues to explore the themes that occupied him for more than fifty years: the relations between language and the world; speaker intention and linguistic meaning; language and mind; mind and body; mind and world; mind and other minds. He asks: what is the role of the concept of truth in these explorations? And, can a scientific world (...)
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  16. Aquinas, Thomas and the arabs (language history and philosophical forms).J. Lohmann - 1995 - Philosophisches Jahrbuch 102 (1):119-128.
     
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  17.  13
    "Chatter": language and history in Kierkegaard.Peter David Fenves - 1993 - Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.
    'Chatter' cannot always be taken lightly, for its insignificance and insubstantiality challenge the very notions of substance and significance through which rational discourses seek justification. This book shows that in 'chatter' Kierkegaard uncovered a specifically linguistic mode of negativity. The author examines in detail those writings of Kierkegaard in which he undertook complex negotiations with the threat - and also the promise - of 'chatter', which cuts across the distinctions in which the relation of language to reality - and (...)
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  18.  9
    A History of Language Philosophies.Lia Formigari - 2004 - Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamin.
    Theory and history combine in this book to form a coherent narrative of the debates on language and languages in the Western world, from ancient classic philosophy to the present, with a final glance at on-going discussions on language as a cognitive tool, on its bodily roots and philogenetic role.An introductory chapter reviews the epistemological areas that converge into, or contribute to, language philosophy, and discusses their methods, relations, and goals. In this context, the status of (...)
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  19. The History and Prehistory of Natural-Language Semantics.Daniel W. Harris - 2017 - In Sandra Lapointe & Christopher Pincock (eds.), Innovations in the History of Analytical Philosophy. Palgrave-MacMillan. pp. 149--194.
    Contemporary natural-language semantics began with the assumption that the meaning of a sentence could be modeled by a single truth condition, or by an entity with a truth-condition. But with the recent explosion of dynamic semantics and pragmatics and of work on non- truth-conditional dimensions of linguistic meaning, we are now in the midst of a shift away from a truth-condition-centric view and toward the idea that a sentence’s meaning must be spelled out in terms of its various roles (...)
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  20.  8
    Truth, Language, and History: Philosophical Essays Volume 5.Donald Davidson - 2005 - Oxford, GB: Clarendon Press.
    Truth, Language, and History is the much-anticipated final volume of Donald Davidson's philosophical writings. In four groups of essays, Davidson continues to explore the themes that occupied him for more than fifty years: the relations between language and the world; speaker intention and linguistic meaning; language and mind; mind and body; mind and world; mind and other minds. He asks: what is the role of the concept of truth in these explorations? And, can a scientific world (...)
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  21. Language and life history: A new perspective on the development and evolution of human language.John L. Locke & Barry Bogin - 2006 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 29 (3):259-280.
    It has long been claimed that Homo sapiens is the only species that has language, but only recently has it been recognized that humans also have an unusual pattern of growth and development. Social mammals have two stages of pre-adult development: infancy and juvenility. Humans have two additional prolonged and pronounced life history stages: childhood, an interval of four years extending between infancy and the juvenile period that follows, and adolescence, a stage of about eight years that stretches (...)
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  22. Theorizing language: analysis, normativity, rhetoric, history.Talbot J. Taylor (ed.) - 1997 - New York: Pergamon Press.
    Although what language users in different cultures say about their own language has long been recognized as of potential interest, its theoretical importance to the study of language has typically been thought to be no more than peripheral. Theorizing Language is the first book to place the reflexive character of language at the very centre both of its empirical study and of its theoretical explanation. Language can only be explained as a cultural product of (...)
     
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  23.  8
    Language, Mind and Body: A Conceptual History.John Earl Joseph - 2017 - Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press.
    Where is language? Answers to this have attempted to 'incorporate' language in an 'extended mind', through cognition that is 'embodied', 'distributed', 'situated' or 'ecological'. Behind these concepts is a long history that this book is the first to trace. Extending across linguistics, philosophy, psychology and medicine, as well as literary and religious dimensions of the question of what language is, and where it is located, this book challenges mainstream, mind-based accounts of language. Looking at research (...)
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  24.  35
    Language in ancient macedonia - giannakis ancient macedonia. Language, history, culture. Pp. 295, ill. Thessaloniki: Centre for the greek language, 2012. Paper. Isbn: 978-960-7779-52-6. [REVIEW]Hallie M. Franks - 2014 - The Classical Review 64 (1):79-80.
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  25.  18
    Chatter: Language and History in Kierkegaard (review).Sylvia Walsh - 1994 - Philosophy and Literature 18 (2):392-393.
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  26. The history of the use of ⟦.⟧-notation in natural language semantics.Brian Rabern - 2016 - Semantics and Pragmatics 9 (12).
    In contemporary natural languages semantics one will often see the use of special brackets to enclose a linguistic expression, e.g. ⟦carrot⟧. These brackets---so-called denotation brackets or semantic evaluation brackets---stand for a function that maps a linguistic expression to its "denotation" or semantic value (perhaps relative to a model or other parameters). Even though this notation has been used in one form or another since the early development of natural language semantics in the 1960s and 1970s, Montague himself didn't make (...)
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  27.  3
    Language and Illumination: Studies in the History of Philosophy.S. Morris Engel - 1971 - Springer.
  28. History of geometry and the development of the form of its language.Ladislav Kvasz - 1998 - Synthese 116 (2):141–186.
    The aim of this paper is to introduce Wittgenstein’s concept of the form of a language into geometry and to show how it can be used to achieve a better understanding of the development of geometry, from Desargues, Lobachevsky and Beltrami to Cayley, Klein and Poincaré. Thus this essay can be seen as an attempt to rehabilitate the Picture Theory of Meaning, from the Tractatus. Its basic idea is to use Picture Theory to understand the pictures of geometry. I (...)
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  29.  9
    The language of history in the Renaissance.Nancy S. Struever - 1970 - Princeton, N.J.,: Princeton University Press.
    At any time, basic assumptions about language have a direct effect on the writing of history. The structure of language is related to the structure of knowledge and thus to the definition of historical reality, while linguistic competence gives insights into the relation of ideas and action. Within the framework of these ideas, and drawing on recent work in linguistic theory, including that of the French structuralists. Professor Struever studies the major shift in attitudes toward language (...)
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  30.  7
    Language and the History of Thought.Nancy S. Struever - 1995 - Boydell & Brewer.
    17 essays discussing the role of language in the history of western thought. Since Adam before the Fall named the animals by true insight into their essences, language has never ceased to be the pivot of efforts to understand human nature and our capacity to feel at home in the twin worlds of nature and society. This volume brings together seventeen essays that have appeared in the Journal of the History of Ideasover the last thirty years. (...)
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  31.  6
    Language and History in Adorno's Notes to Literature.Ulrich Plass - 2006 - Routledge.
    Language and History in Theodor W. Adorno's Notes to Literature explores Adorno’s essays on literature as an independent contribution to his aesthetics with an emphasis on his theory and practice of literary interpretation. Essential to Adorno’s essays is his unorthodox treatment of language and history and his elaboration of the links between the two. One of Adorno’s major but often-neglected claims is that truth is relative to its historical medium, language. Adorno persistently and creatively tries (...)
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  32. Language and History in Adorno's Notes to Literature.Ulrich Plass - 2006 - Routledge.
    _Language and History in Theodor W. Adorno's _Notes to Literature explores Adorno’s essays on literature as an independent contribution to his aesthetics with an emphasis on his theory and practice of literary interpretation. Essential to Adorno’s essays is his unorthodox treatment of language and history and his elaboration of the links between the two. One of Adorno’s major but often-neglected claims is that truth is relative to its historical medium, language. Adorno persistently and creatively tries to (...)
     
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  33. Histories of Philosophy and Thought in the Japanese Language: A Bibliographical Guide from 1835 to 2021.Leon Krings, Yoko Arisaka & Kato Tetsuri - 2022 - Hildesheim, Deutschland: Olms.
    This bibliographical guide gives a comprehensive overview of the historiography of philosophy and thought in the Japanese language through an extensive and thematically organized collection of relevant literature. Comprising over one thousand entries, the bibliography shows not only how extensive and complex the Japanese tradition of philosophical and intellectual historiography is, but also how it might be structured and analyzed to make it accessible to a comparative and intercultural approach to the historiography of philosophy worldwide. The literature is categorized (...)
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  34.  55
    Life history and language: Selection in development.L. Locke John & Bogin Barry - 2006 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 29 (3):301-311.
    Language, like other human traits, could only have evolved during one or more stages of development. We enlist the theoretical framework of human life history to account for certain aspects of linguistic evolution, with special reference to initial phases in the process. It is hypothesized that selection operated at several developmental stages, the earlier ones producing new behaviors that were reinforced by additional, and possibly more powerful, forms of selection during later stages, especially adolescence and early adulthood. Peer (...)
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  35.  6
    Language and History: Integrationist Perspectives.Nigel Love (ed.) - 2006 - Routledge.
    When linguistics was first established as an academic discipline in the nineteenth century, it was envisaged as an essentially historical study. Languages were to be treated as historical objects, evolving through gradual but constant processes of change over long periods of time. In recent years, however, there has been much discussion by historians of a 'linguistic turn' in their own discipline, and, in linguistics, integrationist theory has mounted a radical challenge to the traditional notion of 'languages' as possible objects of (...)
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  36.  53
    Politics, Language and Time: Essays on Political Thought and History.J. G. A. Pocock - 1973 - Political Theory 1 (1):106-108.
  37.  10
    Language, Action, and Context: The Early History of Pragmatics in Europe and America, 1780-1930.Brigitte Nerlich & David D. Clarke - 1996 - John Benjamins Publishing.
    The roots of pragmatics reach back to Antiquity, especially to rhetoric as one of the three liberal arts. However, until the end of the 18th century proto-pragmatic insights tended to be consigned to the pragmatic, that is rhetoric, wastepaper basket and thus excluded from serious philosophical consideration. It can be said that pragmatics was conceived between 1780 and 1830 in Britain, but also in Germany and in France in post-Lockian and post-Kantian philosophies of language. These early ‘conceptions’ of pragmatics (...)
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  38. Language as history/history as language: Saussure and the romance of etymology.Derek Attridge - 1987 - In Derek Attridge, Geoffrey Bennington & Robert Young (eds.), Post-Structuralism and the Question of History. Cambridge University Press. pp. 183--211.
     
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  39.  31
    Rethinking the Linguistic Turn: Current Anxieties in Intellectual HistoryRethinking Intellectual History: Texts, Contexts, Language.History and Criticism.Modern European Intellectual History: Reappraisals and New Perspectives.Post-Structuralism and the Question of History[REVIEW]Anthony Pagden, Dominick LaCapra, Steven L. Kaplan, Derek Attridge, Geoff Bennington & Robert Young - 1988 - Journal of the History of Ideas 49 (3):519.
  40. Heidegger and Unconcealment: Truth, Language, and History.Mark A. Wrathall - 2010 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    This book includes ten essays that trace the notion of unconcealment as it develops from Heidegger's early writings to his later work, shaping his philosophy of truth, language and history. 'Unconcealment' is the idea that what entities are depends on the conditions that allow them to manifest themselves. This concept, central to Heidegger's work, also applies to worlds in a dual sense: first, a condition of entities manifesting themselves is the existence of a world; and second, worlds themselves (...)
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  41. The history of algebra and the development of the form of its language.Ladislav Kvasz - 2006 - Philosophia Mathematica 14 (3):287-317.
    This paper offers an epistemological reconstruction of the historical development of algebra from al-Khwrizm, Cardano, and Descartes to Euler, Lagrange, and Galois. In the reconstruction it interprets the algebraic formulas as a symbolic language and analyzes the changes of this language in the course of history. It turns out that the most fundamental epistemological changes in the development of algebra can be interpreted as changes of the pictorial form of the symbolic language of algebra. Thus the (...)
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  42. Between Language and History: Rorty's Promised Land.Frank R. Ankersmit - 1997 - Common Knowledge 6:44-78.
     
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  43. Between History and Politics: Allegories of Language of Language and the Law in Rousseau and Kafka.Sonia Arribas - 2010 - Pensamiento 66 (248):277-292.
     
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  44.  46
    Warren Goldfarb. Poincaré against the logicists. History and philosophy of modern mathematics, edited by William Aspray and Philip Kitcher, Minnesota studies in the philosophy of science, vol. 11, University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis1988, pp. 61–81. - Michael Friedman. Logical truth and analyticity in Carnap's “Logical syntax of language.”History and philosophy of modern mathematics, edited by William Aspray and Philip Kitcher, Minnesota studies in the philosophy of science, vol. 11, University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis1988, pp. 82–94. - Gregory H. Moore. The emergence of first-order logic. History and philosophy of modern mathematics, edited by William Aspray and Philip Kitcher, Minnesota studies in the philosophy of science, vol. 11, University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis1988, pp. 95–135. - Joseph W. Dauben. Abraham Robinson and nonstandard analysis: history, philosophy, and foundations of mathematics. History and philosophy of modern mathematics, edited by William As. [REVIEW]Michael Hallett - 1990 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 55 (3):1315-1319.
  45.  22
    The languages of history.J. Ferrater Mora - 1982 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 43 (2):137-150.
  46.  28
    History in the Language of Metaphysics.Mark Jordan - 1983 - Review of Metaphysics 36 (4):849 - 866.
    AS THE subtlest part of his see-saw strategy in the Cratylus, Socrates recites several dozen comic etymologies. One of their explicit lessons is that the founders of language were Heracliteans who concealed the ontology of flux in common names. Socrates gives the etymologies, he says, to illustrate the Heraclitean Cratylus's pronouncement that names are natural. The etymologies are bait for Cratylus, of course; they are meant to lure him into a defense of his dogma. But they are more than (...)
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  47.  14
    Language, Being, History in Jacob Boehme’s Theosophy.A. V. Karabykov - 2018 - Russian Journal of Philosophical Sciences 11:126-142.
    The aim of the research is to elucidate the key notions of the German mystic thinker Jacob Boehme’s linguistic-philosophical theory: language of Nature (Natursprache), Adamic language and sensual language in regard to each other and to post-Babel historical languages of humankind. This theory is considered in a dual context of the Late Renaissance “Adamicist” studies and of Boehme’s theosophical project as a whole. Since a considerable part of his work had a form of an extensive commentary on (...)
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  48.  7
    History, science, and the limits of language: an integrationist approach.Roy Harris - 2003 - Shimla: Indian Institute of Advanced Study.
    Lectures delivered by the author at Indian Institute of Advanced Study in October 2002.
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  49.  11
    The Language of Art History.Salim Kemal & Ivan Gaskell (eds.) - 1991 - Cambridge University Press.
    The first volume in the series Cambridge Studies in Philosophy and the Arts offers a range of responses by distinguished philosophers and art historians to some crucial issues generated by the relationship between the art object and language in art history. Each of the chapters in this volume is a searching response to theoretical and practical questions in terms accessible to readers of all human science disciplines. The editors, one a philosopher and one an art historian, provide an (...)
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  50.  7
    Genes, Language, and Culture History in the Southwest Pacific: Human Evolution Series.Jonathan S. Friedlaender (ed.) - 2007 - Oxford University Press USA.
    The broad arc of islands north of Australia that extends from Indonesia east towards the central Pacific is home to a set of human populations whose concentration of diversity is unequaled elsewhere. Approximately 20% of the worlds languages are spoken here, and the biological and genetic heterogeneity among the groups is extraordinary. Anthropologist W.W. Howells once declared diversity in the region so Protean as to defy analysis. However, this book can now claim considerable success in describing and understanding the origins (...)
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