Interpretation and UnderstandingOur species has been hunting for meaning ever since we departed from our cousins in the evolutionary tree. We developed sophisticated forms of communication. Yet, as much as they can convey meaning and foster understanding, they can also hide meaning and prevent comprehension. Indeed, we can never be sure that a "yes" conveys assent or that a smile reveals pleasure. In order to ascertain what communicative behavior "means", we have to go through an elaborate cognitive process of interpretation. This book deals with how we achieve the daily miracle of understanding each other. Based on the author's contributions to pragmatics, the book articulates his perspective using the insights of linguistics, the philosophy of language and rhetoric, and confronting alternatives to it. Theory formation is shaped by application to fields of human activity - such as legal practice, artificial intelligence, psychoanalysis, the media, literature, aesthetics, ethics and politics - where interpretation and understanding are paramount. Using an accessible language, this is a book addressed to specialists as well as to anyone interested in interpreting understanding and understanding the potentialities and limits of interpretation. |
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... Beyondism : Religion from Science . New York : Praeger . Chafe , W. 1974. " Language and consciousness " . Language 59 : 11-133 . Chafe , W. 1982. " Integration and involvement in speaking , writing , and oral literature " . In D ...
... Beyondism : Religion from Science . New York : Praeger . Chafe , W. 1974. " Language and consciousness " . Language 59 : 11-133 . Chafe , W. 1982. " Integration and involvement in speaking , writing , and oral literature " . In D ...
Contents
CHAPTER | 3 |
CHAPTER | 10 |
Conversational relevance | 31 |
CHAPTER 3 | 52 |
CHAPTER 4 | 82 |
CHAPTER 5 | 101 |
CHAPTER 6 | 115 |
CHAPTER 12 | 145 |
CHAPTER 17 | 380 |
CHAPTER 18 | 402 |
CHAPTER 19 | 437 |
CHAPTER 20 | 457 |
CHAPTER 21 | 477 |
CHAPTER 22 | 497 |
CHAPTER 24 | 518 |
CHAPTER 25 | 537 |
CHAPTER 7 | 149 |
CHAPTER 8 | 169 |
CHAPTER 9 | 194 |
CHAPTER 10 | 213 |
CHAPTER 11 | 244 |
Three remarks on pragmatics and literature | 273 |
CHAPTER 14 | 293 |
CHAPTER 15 | 314 |
CHAPTER 16 | 362 |
Does pragmatics need semantics? | 562 |
CHAPTER 27 | 594 |
CHAPTER 29 | 623 |
CHAPTER 30 | 641 |
Sources and acknowledgments | 660 |
695 | |
709 | |
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Common terms and phrases
able accepted according action actual analysis answer applied argument assertion assigned assume assumptions attempt aval behavior belief belong called Chapter claim clear clues cognitive commitment communicative component concept concerning considered context conversational convey correct course critical definition demand described determine digressions discourse discussion distinction example explain expression fact force function further given hand idea implicature important indicate individual intention interaction interpretation involvement kind knowledge language latter layers least linguistic logical maxim meaning misunderstanding namely nature notion object particular perform perhaps person position possible pragmatic present principle problem proposed propositional question rational reason reference rejected relevant respect response result role rules seems semantic sense sentence shared situation social speaker's speaker's meaning specific speech act structure suggested theory tion topic truth turn understanding usually utterance