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  • × subject_ss:"Semantics (Philosophy)"
  • × year_i:[2000 TO 2010}
  1. Brandom, R.B.: Expressive Vernunft : Begründung, Repräsentation und diskursive Festlegung (2000) 0.02
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    Abstract
    Was bedeutet es, »wir« zu sagen? Warum gelten gerade »wir« als vernünftige Wesen, als Wissende und Handelnde? Was müssten Schimpansen oder Computer zu tun imstande sein, damit sich mit Recht sagen ließe, sie gehören zu »uns«? Ausgehend von diesen den Kern philosophischen Denkens berührenden Fragen, hat Robert B. Brandom vor gut 20 Jahren mit Expressive Vernunft eine Untersuchung über das Wesen der Sprache vorgelegt, die den Rahmen üblicher sprachphilosophischer Ansätze sprengt und zentralen Topoi der Philosophie des Geistes und der Logik neue Konturen verleiht. Mit ihrem Anspruch, »eine einheitliche Sicht auf Sprache und Geist zu entwickeln«, ist sie längst zum Klassiker geworden und liegt nun erstmals als Taschenbuch vor.
    Footnote
    Rez. in: Frankfurter Rundschau Nr.141 vom 20.6.2000, S.22 (J. Habermas)
  2. Nirenburg, S.; Raskin, V.: Ontological semantics (2004) 0.00
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    BK
    18.00 Einzelne Sprachen und Literaturen allgemein
    Classification
    18.00 Einzelne Sprachen und Literaturen allgemein
  3. Maasen, S.; Weingart, P.: Metaphors and the dynamics of knowledge (2000) 0.00
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    Abstract
    A striking characteristic of modern knowledge society is the rapid spread of certain ideas and concepts back and forth from everyday to scientific discourses, and across many different contexts of meaning. This book opens up a new road to the study of these 'dynamics of knowledge'. Sociologists of knowledge and recently evolutionary theorists have offered explanations that either attribute social attention to particular ideas or shifts of meaning to the predominance of certain groups. Maasen and Weingart, however, offer a radical new explanation that explains knowledge dynamics by reference to the interaction between metaphors and discourses. The study focuses on three major case studies: - The spread of Darwin's phrase 'struggle for existence'; - the reception of Thomas Kuhn's Structure of Scientific Revolutions in the sciences and humanities; - the diffusion of the concept of 'chaos' from scientific to everyday discourses. In its innovative theoretical approach (called 'metaphor analysis') and rich empirical analysis the book will be of interest for social and cognitive scientists alike
    Series
    Routledge studies in social and political thought ; 26