Benjamin Lee Whorf's theory of language, culture, and consciousness: A critique of western science [An article from: Language and Communication]


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This digital document is a journal article from Language and Communication, published by Elsevier in 2005. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

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Benjamin Lee Whorf's (1897-1941) writings generally fall into two categories: those related to his research on the Hopi and Mayan cultures and languages, and those providing a critique of linguistic theory in particular and Western science in general. This paper is focused on six essays in Carroll's collection of Whorf's work: the first two essays, written in the mid-1930s, fall into the first category: ''An American Indian Model of the Universe'' and ''A Linguistic Consideration of Thinking in Primitive Communities''; and the final four essays, written at the end of his life, fall into the second category: ''Science and Linguistics'' (1940), ''Linguistics as an Exact Science'' (1940), ''Language and Logic'' (1941), and ''Language, Mind, and Reality'' (1942).

Product Details

Date: 2005-04-01

Media: Digital (10 Pages)

Format: HTML

Label: Elsevier

Manufacturer: Elsevier

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