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Language and Cognitive Structures of Emotion

English · Hardback

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Description

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This book examines linguistic expressions of emotion in intensional contexts and offers a formally elegant account of the relationship between language and emotion. The author presents a compelling case for the view that there exist, contrary to popular belief, logical universals at the intersection of language and emotive content. This book shows that emotive structures in the mind that are widely assumed to be not only subjectively or socio-culturally variable but also irrelevant to a general theory of cognition offer an unusually suitable ground for a formal theory of emotive representations, allowing for surprising logical and cognitive consequences for a theory of cognition. Challenging mainstream assumptions in cognitive science and in linguistics, this book will appeal to linguists, philosophers of the mind, linguistic anthropologists, psychologists and cognitive scientists of all persuasions.

List of contents

Chapter I: Introduction: Intensionality and Emotive Expressions.- Chapter II: How the Intentional Content of Emotion can be Traced to the Intensionality of Emotive Expressions.- Chapter III: Emotive Intensionality, Meaning and Grammar.- Chapter IV: Toward an Architecture of the Language-Emotion Interface.- Chapter V: Conclusion.

About the author

Prakash Mondal is Assistant Professor of Linguistics and Cognitive Science at the Indian Institute of Technology Hyderabad. He is the author of Language, Mind and Computation (2014), Natural Language and Possible Minds (2016) and Language, Biology and Cognition (completed).

Summary

This book examines linguistic expressions of emotion in intensional contexts and offers a formally elegant account of the relationship between language and emotion. The author presents a compelling case for the view that there exist, contrary to popular belief, logical universals at the intersection of language and emotive content. This book shows that emotive structures in the mind that are widely assumed to be not only subjectively or socio-culturally variable but also irrelevant to a general theory of cognition offer an unusually suitable ground for a formal theory of emotive representations, allowing for surprising logical and cognitive consequences for a theory of cognition. Challenging mainstream assumptions in cognitive science and in linguistics, this book will appeal to linguists, philosophers of the mind, linguistic anthropologists, psychologists and cognitive scientists of all persuasions.

Product details

Authors Prakash Mondal
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 01.01.2016
 
EAN 9783319336893
ISBN 978-3-31-933689-3
No. of pages 182
Dimensions 148 mm x 15 mm x 217 mm
Weight 372 g
Illustrations XVII, 182 p. 24 illus.
Series Springer Palgrave Macmillan
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Linguistics and literary studies > General and comparative linguistics

Sprachphilosophie, B, Semiotik und Semiologie, Philosophy of Language, Linguistics, Philosophy of Mind, Social Sciences, Psycholinguistics and Cognitive Lingusitics, Psycholinguistics, Language and languages—Philosophy, Theoretical Linguistics, Semantics, discourse analysis, stylistics, Semantics

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