Taylor, Charles

Language animal : the full shape of the human linguistic capacity - Cambridge; Harvard University Press, 2016. - 352 p.; 24 cm.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

In this book, Charles Taylor explains linguistic holism to people who believe language needs to be thought of as bits of information. According to one influential view of language, one that originated with Hobbes, Locke, and Condillac, language serves to encode information and to communicate it. This theory has been rendered more sophisticated over the last two centuries, but it still gives a central place to the encoding of information. The thesis of Taylor's new book is that this view neglects crucial features of our language capacity. Sometimes language serves not just to encode information, but also shapes what it purports to describe.

9780674660205


Cognition
Linguistic holism
Linguistic philosophy

401 / TAY

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