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Language in Mind: Advances in the Study of Language and Thought

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EDITORIAL REVIEW

The idea that the language we speak influences the way we think has evoked perennial fascination and intense controversy. According to the strong version of this hypothesis, called the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis after the American linguists who propounded it, languages vary in their semantic partitioning of the world, and the structure of one's language influences how one understands the world. Thus speakers of different languages perceive the world differently.

Although the last two decades have been marked by extreme skepticism concerning the possible effects of language on thought, recent theoretical and methodological advances in cognitive science have given the question new life. Research in linguistics and linguistic anthropology has revealed striking differences in cross-linguistic semantic patterns, and cognitive psychology has developed subtle techniques for studying how people represent and remember experience. It is now possible to test predictions about how a given language influences the thinking of its speakers.

Language in Mind includes contributions from both skeptics and believers and from a range of fields. It contains work in cognitive psychology, cognitive development, linguistics, anthropology, and animal cognition. The topics discussed include space, number, motion, gender, theory of mind, thematic roles, and the ontological distinction between objects and substances. The contributors include Melissa Bowerman, Eve Clark, Jill de Villiers, Peter de Villiers, Giyoo Hatano, Stan Kuczaj, Barbara Landau, Stephen Levinson, John Lucy, Barbara Malt, Dan Slobin, Steven Sloman, Elizabeth Spelke, and Michael Tomasello.

PRODUCT DETAILS

Publisher: The MIT Press
Pub. Date: 1st April 2003
Catalog: Book
Media: Paperback
Number Of Pages: 538
Ean: 9780262571630
Isbn: 0262571633

ABOUT THIS BOOK

USER REVIEWS

Whorf's postulate
~ Written on Feb 20, 2006. 2 out of 7 users found this review helpful.

The model (theory) of the world that an intelligence will form
depends upon the particular representation used by the learner.
(Machine Learning, Tom Mitchell, McGraw Hill, 1997, pgs 65-66)
While this is rigorously true for the learner's INTERNAL
representation (i.e. the language of thought) it will also
apply to NATURAL languages that the agent employs to the
degree that reasoning is performed in the natural language
and/or to the degree to which the natural language mirrors
the language of thought. This dependence of the learner's
understanding of the world on his language may help to
explain why translation between natural languages is so
difficult. Gentner and Goldin-Meadow's book does a good
job of discussing current research in this area.

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