Language and Learning: Philosophy of Language in the Hellenistic Age

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Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2005-07-04
Publisher(s): Cambridge University Press
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Summary

The philosophers and scholars of the Hellenistic world laid the foundations upon which the Western tradition based analytical grammar, linguistics, philosophy of language, and other disciplines probing the nature and origin of human communication. Building on the pioneering work of Plato and Aristotle, these thinkers developed a wide range of theories about the nature and origin of language which reflected broader philosophical commitments. In this collection of nine essays, a team of distinguished scholars examines the philosophies of language developed by, among others, Plato, Aristotle, Epicurus, the Stoics, and Lucretius. They probe the early thinkers' philosophical adequacy and their impact on later theorists. With discussions ranging from the Stoics on the origin of language to the theories of language in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, the collection will be of interest to students of philosophy and of language in the classical period and beyond.

Table of Contents

List of contributors
vii
Preface ix
List of abbreviations
xi
Introduction 1(13)
The Stoics on the origin of language and the foundations of etymology
14(22)
James Allen
Stoic linguistics, Plato's Cratylus, and Augustine's De dialectica
36(20)
A. A. Long
Epicurus and his predecessors on the origin of language
56(45)
Alexander Verlinsky
Lucretius on what language is not
101(38)
Catherine Atherton
Communicating Cynicism: Diogenes' gangsta rap
139(25)
Ineke Sluiter
Common sense: concepts, definition and meaning in and out of the Stoa
164(46)
Charles Brittain
Varro's anti-analogist
210(29)
David Blank
The Stoics on fallacies of equivocation
239(35)
Susanne Bobzien
What is a disjunction?
274(25)
Jonathan Barnes
Theories of language in the Hellenistic age and in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries
299(21)
Sten Ebbesen
References 320(16)
Index nominum et rerum 336(5)
Index locorum 341

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