Ontolinguistics: How Ontological Status Shapes the Linguistic Coding of Concepts

Front Cover
Andrea C. Schalley, Dietmar Zaefferer
Walter de Gruyter, 2007 - Computers - 486 pages

Current progress in linguistic theorizing is more and more informed by cross-linguistic (including cross-modal) investigation. Comparison of languages relies crucially on the concepts that can be coded with similar effort in all languages. These concepts are part of every language user's ontology, the network of cross-connected conceptualizations the mind uses in coping with the world.

Assuming that language comparability is rooted in the comparability of user ontologies, the idea of the present volume is to further instigate progress in linguistics by looking behind the interface with the conceptual-intentional system and asking a still underexplored question: How are ontological structures reflected in intra- and cross-linguistic regularities? This question defines the research program of ontology based linguistics or ontolinguistics.

Recent advances in the theory of language have been characterized by an emphasis on external explanatory adequacy and thus on relating language to other phenomena. The research program introduced in this volume adds a decisively distinct and fresh aspect to this emerging new contextualization of the field by bringing together insights from different areas, mainly linguistics, but also neuroscience, philosophy, and artificial intelligence. In providing these disciplines with a new common task, the exploration of the impact of ontological structures on linguistic regularities, the ontolinguistic approach promises to develop into a vital branch of cognitive science.

Documenting the beginnings, the book aims to instigate future interdisciplinary research in this area. It will be of interest to researchers in linguistics, artificial intelligence, philosophy, and cognitive science in general.

 

Contents

Ontolinguistics An outline
3
Ontologies across disciplines
21
Concepts with closedclass coding
67
Building blocks for
71
The Suggested Upper Merged
103
Semantic primes and conceptual ontology
145
Using Ontolinguistics for language description
175
Mental and linguistic concepts
193
Semantic categorizations and encoding strategies
329
Taxonomic and meronomic superordinates with nominal coding
359
Identity criteria and French
379
On the ontological conceptual and grammatical foundations of verb
395
The ontological loneliness of verb phrase idioms
419
Relating ontological knowledge and internal structure of eventity
435
About the contributors
459
Language index
473

Leonard Talmy
231
Spatial on in categories and their prepositional codings across
295

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