This study of Anglo-American legal discourse is the first comprehensive discourse analysis of American legal language in its prototypical setting, the trial by jury. With ethnographic data gathered in a civil jury trial, the book compares the discourse processing of the legal participants and the la
The Ontology of Language: Properties, Individuals and Discourse
β Scribed by Chris Fox
- Publisher
- CSLI Publications
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 223
- Series
- Center for the Study of Language and Information - CSLI Lecture Notes 105
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The Ontology of Language explores how semantic issues can be addressed in a way that minimizes the ontological commitments of the resulting semantics. The book works within a version of Property Theory stemming from a combination of the lambda calculus with Aczel's Frege structures-a combination originally developed by Raymond Turner. Fox then improves on this version and substantially extends it with original applications to plurals and mass nouns, to 'intensional individuals', and to the dynamics of discourse. Some useful appendixes on further extensions and alternatives are included.
β¦ Subjects
Π―Π·ΡΠΊΠΈ ΠΈ ΡΠ·ΡΠΊΠΎΠ·Π½Π°Π½ΠΈΠ΅;ΠΠΈΠ½Π³Π²ΠΈΡΡΠΈΠΊΠ°;ΠΠΈΡΠΊΡΡΡ ΠΈ Π΄ΠΈΡΠΊΡΡΡ-Π°Π½Π°Π»ΠΈΠ·;
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<span>here is broad agreement in the medieval tradition that we conceive things in the world owing to the transmission of intelligible content through various media that culminates in the concept by which something in the world is cognitively present for us. Yet how the intelligible content is trans
<p><P>In his well-known <EM>Discourse on Metaphysics</EM>, Leibniz puts individual substance at the basis of metaphysical building. In so doing, he connects himself to a venerable tradition. His theory of individual concept, however, breaks with another idea of the same tradition, that no account of