Presented to you through Paradigm Publishing Services
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
Introduction
Theories of form and meaning
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Preface vii
- Introduction 1
-
Part 1. General concepts
- 1.1. The evolution of conciousness and its neurological foundation 7
- 1.2. From primate signals to human signs 13
- 1.3. The concept of reference in a self-organizing system 17
- 1.4. Higher-order consciousness reexamined 21
- 1.5. The locus and function of monosemy in human consciousness 25
- 1.6. The ultimate nature of meaning 33
- 1.7. The role of metaphor in higher-order consciousness 39
- 1.8. The place of sign theory in neurolinguistics 43
-
Part 2. Archetypes of meaning
- 2.1. The archetypes of time-consciousness 53
- 2.2. Evidence of time-consciousness in prepositions 61
- 2.3. Comparing time- and space-consciousness in prepositions 71
- 2.4. Further evidence of space-consciousness in prepositions 77
- 2.5. Plurality as the defining characteristic of one-dimensional phenomena 81
- 2.6. Further evidence of space-consciousness in grammatical relations 87
- 2.7. The space-time continuum in human consciousness 93
-
Part 3. Syntactic structure
- 3.1. The syntactic structure of sign relations 97
- 3.2. The modification relation in English 103
- 3.3. The structure of the English predicate 113
- 3.4. The modification relation in French 121
- 3.5. The archetypal structure of the French verb 133
-
Part 4. The structure of the lexicon
- 4.1. Transition to lexical meaning 149
- 4.2. Archetypes in the nominal lexicon 151
- 4.3. Archetypes in the verbal lexicon 159
- Epilogue 163
- Bibliography 169
- Index 173
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Preface vii
- Introduction 1
-
Part 1. General concepts
- 1.1. The evolution of conciousness and its neurological foundation 7
- 1.2. From primate signals to human signs 13
- 1.3. The concept of reference in a self-organizing system 17
- 1.4. Higher-order consciousness reexamined 21
- 1.5. The locus and function of monosemy in human consciousness 25
- 1.6. The ultimate nature of meaning 33
- 1.7. The role of metaphor in higher-order consciousness 39
- 1.8. The place of sign theory in neurolinguistics 43
-
Part 2. Archetypes of meaning
- 2.1. The archetypes of time-consciousness 53
- 2.2. Evidence of time-consciousness in prepositions 61
- 2.3. Comparing time- and space-consciousness in prepositions 71
- 2.4. Further evidence of space-consciousness in prepositions 77
- 2.5. Plurality as the defining characteristic of one-dimensional phenomena 81
- 2.6. Further evidence of space-consciousness in grammatical relations 87
- 2.7. The space-time continuum in human consciousness 93
-
Part 3. Syntactic structure
- 3.1. The syntactic structure of sign relations 97
- 3.2. The modification relation in English 103
- 3.3. The structure of the English predicate 113
- 3.4. The modification relation in French 121
- 3.5. The archetypal structure of the French verb 133
-
Part 4. The structure of the lexicon
- 4.1. Transition to lexical meaning 149
- 4.2. Archetypes in the nominal lexicon 151
- 4.3. Archetypes in the verbal lexicon 159
- Epilogue 163
- Bibliography 169
- Index 173