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The many philosophers, linguists, and cognitive scientists writing on
metaphor over the past two decades have generally taken for granted
that metaphor lies outside, if not in opposition to, received
conceptions of semantics and grammar. Assuming that metaphor cannot be
explained by or within semantics, they claim that metaphor has little,
if anything, to teach us about semantic theory. In this book Josef
Stern challenges these assumptions. He is concerned primarily with the
question: Given the received conception of the form and goals of
semantic theory, does metaphorical interpretation, in whole or part,
fall within its scope? Specifically, he asks, what (if anything) does
a speaker-hearer know as part of her semantic competence when she
knows the interpretation of a metaphor?
According to Stern, the answer to these questions lies in the
systematic context-dependence of metaphorical interpretation. Drawing
on a deep analogy between demonstratives, indexicals, and metaphors,
Stern develops a formal theory of metaphorical meaning that underlies
a speaker's ability to interpret a metaphor. With his semantics, he
also addresses a variety of philosophical and linguistic issues raised
by metaphor. These include the interpretive structure of complex
extended metaphors, the cognitive significance of metaphors and their
literal paraphrasability, the pictorial character of metaphors, the
role of similarity and exemplification in metaphorical interpretation,
metaphor-networks, dead metaphors, the relation of metaphors to other
figures, and the dependence of metaphors on literal meanings. Unlike
most metaphor theorists, however, who take these problems to be sui
generis to metaphor, Stern subsumes them under the same rubric as
other semantic facts that hold for nonmetaphorical language.
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