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Sep 2012
ISBN 0262517752
448 pp.
18 illus.
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Language, Thought, and Reality, second edition
Benjamin Lee Whorf , John B. Carroll , Stephen C. Levinson and Penny Lee

The pioneering linguist Benjamin Whorf (1897¿1941) grasped the relationship between human language and human thinking: how language can shape our innermost thoughts. His basic thesis is that our perception of the world and our ways of thinking about it are deeply influenced by the structure of the languages we speak. The writings collected in this volume include important papers on the Maya, Hopi, and Shawnee languages, as well as more general reflections on language and meaning.

Whorf's ideas about the relation of language and thought have always appealed to a wide audience, but their reception in expert circles has alternated between dismissal and applause. Recently the language sciences have headed in directions that give Whorf's thinking a renewed relevance. Hence this new edition of Whorf's classic work is especially timely.

The second edition includes all the writings from the first edition as well as John Carroll's original introduction, a new foreword by Stephen Levinson of the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics that puts Whorf¿s work in historical and contemporary context, and new indexes. In addition, this edition offers Whorf's "Yale Report," an important work from Whorf's mature oeuvre.

Table of Contents
 Foreword
by Stephen C. Levinson
 Introduction
by John B. Carroll
1 On the Connection of Ideas
2 On Psychology
3 A Central Mexican Inscription Combining Mexican and Maya Day Signs
4 The Punctual and Segmentative Aspects of Verbs in Hopi
5 An American Indian Model of the Universe
6 A Linguistic Consideration of Thinking in Primitive Communities
7 Grammatical Categories
8 Discussion of Hopi Linguistics
9 Some Verbal Categories of Hopi
10 Language: Plan and Conception of Arrangement
11 The Relation of Habitual Thought and Behavior to Language
12 Gestalt Technique of Stem Composition in Shawnee
13 Decipherment of the Linguistic Portion of the Maya Hieroglyphs
14 Linguistic Factors in the Terminology of Hopi Architecture
15 Science and Linguistics
16 Linguistics as an Exact Science
17 Languages and Logic
18 Language, Mind, and Reality
 Appendix: The "Yale Report": Report on Linguistic Research in the Department of Anthropology of Yale University for the Term September 1937-June 1938
 Bibliography
 Indexes
 
 


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