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García Ramírez, Eduardo. Open compositionality: towards a new methodology of language / Eduardo García-Ramírez. — 1 online resource (xiv, 227 pages) — <URL:http://elib.fa.ru/ebsco/2176383.pdf>.

Record create date: 4/22/2019

Subject: Compositionality (Linguistics); Compositionality (Linguistics)

Collections: EBSCO

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Open Compositionality: Towards a Methodology of Language offers a fresh view into human languages as supermodular, highly interactive cognitive capacities allowing for human unique thought and communication. It is a novel account of semantics as decision-making in tandem with the cognition first methodology.

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Table of Contents

  • Cover
  • Open Compositionality
  • Open Compositionality: Toward a New Methodology of Language
  • Copyright
  • Dedication
  • Contents
  • Preface
  • Chapter 1
    • Two Views of Language
      • 1.1 The Closed View: Closed Compositionality
      • 1.2 The Open View
      • 1.3 Why Both Views Matter
      • 1.4 Toward Open Compositionality
      • Note
  • Chapter 2
    • The Closed View and Strong Compositionality
      • 2.1 A (Very) Brief History of Compositionality
      • 2.2 The Principle(s) and Methodology
      • 2.3 Applying the Methodology
      • 2.4 Independent Evidence for the Closed View
      • 2.5 Cognitive Psychological Facts and Semantic Theorizing
      • Notes
  • Chapter 3
    • The Failure of Strong Compositionality
      • 3.1 Strong Compositionality as a Cognitive Hypothesis
      • 3.2 Strong Compositionality as a Processing Hypothesis
      • 3.3 Language acquisition and development
      • 3.4 Word Learning
      • 3.5 Syntax Acquisition
      • 3.6 Language Processing
      • 3.7 Natural Languages and Strong Compositionality
  • Chapter 4
    • Open Compositionality and the Cognition-First Methodology
      • 4.1 The Lewisian Compromise
      • 4.2 Language as a Supermodule: What We Know and How We Know It
      • 4.3 Semantics as Decision-Making: How We Use It
      • 4.4 The Cognition-First Methodology
      • 4.5 Productivity, Systematicity, and Computability
      • 4.6 Open Compositionality against Alternatives
  • Chapter 5
    • Lexical Processing Architecture and Substitution Failure
      • 5.1 The Phenomenon and Its Scope
      • 5.2 Memory for Proper Names
      • 5.3 Simple Heuristics for Proper Names
      • 5.4 Processing Architecture for Distinct Names
      • 5.5 A Processing Approach to Substitution Failure
      • 5.6 Frege’s and Kripke’s Puzzles
      • Note
  • Chapter 6
    • Decoupled Representations and Empty Names
      • 6.1 Pretense and imaginings
      • 6.2 The cognitive account of empty names
      • 6.3 Solving philosophical puzzles
      • 6.4 Closing Remarks
      • Notes
  • Chapter 7
    • Moral Discourse, Moral Cognition, and the Language Analogy
      • 7.1 The challenges of naturalist moral realism
      • 7.2 Moral cognition and development
      • 7.3 The Language Analogy
      • 7.4 Objectivity, Conventionality, Universality, and Normativity
      • 7.5 Knowledge, Motivation, and Semantics
      • Note
  • Bibliography
  • Index
  • About the Author

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