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E-raamat: Meaning, Narrativity, and the Real: The Semiotics of Law in Legal Education IV

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  • Ilmumisaeg: 29-Feb-2016
  • Kirjastus: Springer International Publishing AG
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783319281759
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 29-Feb-2016
  • Kirjastus: Springer International Publishing AG
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783319281759

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This book examines the concept of meaning and ourgeneral understanding of reality in a legal and philosophical context. Startingfrom the premise that meaning is a matter of linguistic and other forms ofarticulation, it considers the inherent philosophical consequences. PartI presents Klages", Derrida"s, Von Hofmannsthal"s and Wittgenstein"sexplorations of silence as a source of articulation and meaning. Debatesabout 20 th century psychologism gave theattitude concept a pivotal role; it illustrates the importance of the discoverythat a word is globally qualified as "the basic unit of language". Thisis mirrored in the fact that we understand reality as a matter of particles andthus interpret the real as a component of an all-embracing "particle story". Each chapter of the book focuses on an aspect of legal semiotics relatedto the chapter"s theme: for instance on the meaning of a Judge"s "Saying forLaw", on law students training in varying attitudes or on the ties between

lawand language.Part II of the book illustrates our generalunderstanding of reality as a matter of particles and partitioning, andexamines texts that prove that particle thinking is basic for our meaningconcept. It shows that physics, quantum theory, holism, and modern brainresearch focusing on human linguistic capabilities, confirm their ties to theparticle story. In contrast, the book concludes that partitions and particlesare neither a fact in the history of the cosmos nor a determinant of knowledgeand the sciences, and that meaning is a process: a constellation rather than afixation. This is manifest once one understands meaning as the result ofcontinuously changing attitudes, which create our narratives on cosmos andcreation. The book proposes a new key for meaning: a linguistic occurrenceanchored in dimensions of human narrativity.

Preface.- Part I Philosophy andLanguage.- Chapter 1 Silence.- Chapter2 Attitude.- Chapter 3 Word.- Part II Particles andPartition.- Chapter 4 Particles.- Chapter5 Partitions.- Chapter6 Meaning in a New Key.- SubjectIndex.- Author Index.
Part I Philosophy and Language
1 Silence
3(42)
1 Silence, Cosmic and Cultural
3(6)
1.1 Peirce, His Porch and Its Silence
3(1)
1.2 The Breach of Silence
4(1)
1.3 Meaning and the Breach of Silence
5(1)
1.4 The Quality of Silence
6(2)
1.5 New Focus on Meaning
8(1)
2 Silence and the Sign Pool
9(4)
2.1 Life and Signs
10(1)
2.2 Pool and Everyday
11(1)
2.3 Life---World
12(1)
3 Logocentric Silence
13(11)
3.1 Mind and Meaning
14(1)
3.2 Mauthner
15(2)
3.3 Klages' Logocentrism
17(1)
3.4 Logocentrism and the Word
18(1)
3.5 Speech and the Utterance of Words
19(2)
3.6 Speech and Words
21(1)
3.7 Consciousness and Meaning
22(1)
3.8 Derrida, Metaphysics
22(2)
4 The Chandos Letter
24(5)
4.1 The Meaning of the Chandos Letter
25(3)
4.2 The Emancipation of Meaning
28(1)
5 Tractatus, Meaning, Silence
29(8)
5.1 Meaning
29(1)
5.2 Bertrand Russell
30(1)
5.3 Vienna
31(3)
5.4 Peirce and Russell on Meaning
34(2)
5.5 The Tractatus' Silence
36(1)
6 Legal Semiotics (1): Silence and `Saying for Law'
37(8)
6.1 Semiotics
38(1)
6.2 Mistrust
39(1)
6.3 Legal Education
40(1)
6.4 Surface- and Deep Structure
40(1)
6.5 Sign and Norm
41(1)
6.6 Meaning and the Third
42(1)
References
43(2)
2 Attitude
45(48)
1 Meaning and Attitude
45(1)
2 Attitude in Psychology and Philosophy
46(2)
2.1 Readiness to Act
46(1)
2.2 Views in Context
47(1)
3 Husserl on Logic, 1896 and 1908
48(2)
3.1 Psychologism
48(1)
3.2 Attitude and Phenomenology: 1908
49(1)
4 Attitude as a Philosophical Concept
50(3)
4.1 Phansic and Ontic
51(1)
4.2 Einstellung
52(1)
5 The Intellectual Climate of "Einstellung" [ Attitude]
53(4)
5.1 Von Schiller, `Dichtung' and Philosophy
54(1)
5.2 Naive and Sentimental
54(2)
5.3 Highlighting "Einstellung"
56(1)
6 Attitude as a Phenomenological Issue
57(4)
6.1 Kant and Subjectivity
57(1)
6.2 Attitude Change as Philosophical Theory
58(1)
6.3 Self-Reflection
58(1)
6.4 Ego Implications
59(1)
6.5 A First Creation
60(1)
7 The Pivotal Role of "Einstellung/Attitude" in Phenomenological Meaning Research
61(8)
7.1 Einstellungsanderung
61(1)
7.2 Logic and Einstellung
62(2)
7.3 Attitude Variations
64(1)
7.4 The First
64(1)
7.5 Categorial Objects
65(1)
7.6 Psychologism
66(1)
7.7 A Law of the Human Mind
67(1)
7.8 Diagrams, Einstellung
67(2)
8 Peirce Meets Husserl on Skype
69(10)
8.1 Four Themes
69(1)
8.2 The Importance of Attitude
69(1)
8.3 On Phenomenology
70(3)
8.4 Tyche and Transcendence
73(3)
8.5 On Language
76(3)
9 Attitude, Partition, and Plurality
79(9)
9.1 Aspects of Attitude, Philosophically
80(1)
9.2 Einstellung---Entstellung
81(2)
9.3 DifferAnce/'Ent'stellung
83(1)
9.4 A Sign's Meaning
83(1)
9.5 The Specular Image
84(1)
9.6 Attitude and Leveled Language
85(1)
9.7 A Conclusion
86(1)
9.8 Natural---Non-naive Natural
87(1)
10 Legal Semiotics (2): Training Attitude-Changes
88(5)
References
90(3)
3 Word
93(58)
1 The `Word' and Its `More Geometrico'
93(5)
1.1 A "More Geometrico" Philosophy of Language
95(1)
1.2 The Hidden Philosophy of Language: On the Particle
96(2)
2 Peirce, Semiotics & Significs
98(8)
2.1 Sign and Symbol
99(3)
2.2 Between Signifies and Semiotics
102(3)
2.3 Peirce's "Dicisign"
105(1)
3 Searle, and `The Word'
106(4)
3.1 The `Principle of Expressibility'
106(2)
3.2 The `Word' as Basic Unit of Language
108(1)
3.3 Sociolinguistic Activity: The Speech Act
108(1)
3.4 Meaning in Speech and Language
109(1)
4 Frege, and the Sentence
110(2)
4.1 The Word
110(1)
4.2 The Sentence as Unit
110(1)
4.3 "Doing with" Words
111(1)
5 Sebastian Shaumyan: Word, Dynamisms and Layered Language
112(4)
5.1 The Structure of Language as Hypothetical Construct
112(1)
5.2 A Semiotic Two-Level Structure
113(1)
5.3 Words in Layers
114(1)
5.4 Consciousness, Meaning
115(1)
6 Julia Kristeva: Engenderment and the Speaking Subject
116(10)
6.1 Texts, Pheno-Text and Geno-Text
117(1)
6.2 Semanalysis
118(1)
6.3 A Text: Not a Linguistic Phenomenon
119(1)
6.4 Against Static Linguistics
120(2)
6.5 The Speaking Subject
122(1)
6.6 Construct and Reality
123(2)
6.7 Overcoming the Abyss
125(1)
6.8 The Act of Speaking Speaks a Language
126(1)
7 Benjamin's Word
126(12)
7.1 The Use of the Word
127(1)
7.2 Multiple Languages, Human Essence
128(1)
7.3 The Importance of Language
129(1)
7.4 What Are Words?
129(1)
7.5 The Meaning of `Word'
130(1)
7.6 The Word of God
131(3)
7.7 Layered Languages, Changing Attitudes
134(2)
7.8 Space and Time in Language
136(2)
8 Preliminary Conclusions
138(3)
8.1 Singularity and `The Word'
138(1)
8.2 Genesis and Meaning
139(1)
8.3 Name and Breach
140(1)
8.4 Brain and Meaning
140(1)
9 Legal Semiotics (3): Law and Language
141(10)
9.1 Saying a Word
142(1)
9.2 Text Structures
142(1)
9.3 Signifies
143(1)
9.4 Firsts, Dialogues, and Triads
144(1)
9.5 No Surface Alone
145(1)
9.6 A Conclusion for Law Students
145(1)
References
146(5)
Part II Particles and Partitions
4 Particles
151(52)
1 Particle Flurry (Celan)
152(10)
1.1 Engfuhrung
154(1)
1.2 Ground Lines of the Poem
154(2)
1.3 Atomism Articulated
156(1)
1.4 Particle and Opinion
157(2)
1.5 The Spoken Word
159(2)
1.6 The Meaning of Meaninglessness
161(1)
2 Particle: Theory and Experiment
162(15)
2.1 Theory in Physics
163(1)
2.2 Particles, Balls
164(1)
2.3 Double-Slit
164(2)
2.4 Wave-Particle Duality
166(1)
2.5 The Third
167(3)
2.6 Bohm
170(2)
2.7 Quantum Potential
172(2)
2.8 Multileveled Articulations
174(2)
2.9 Interaction and Participation
176(1)
3 Cezanne's Brushstrokes
177(14)
3.1 The Particle in Painting
177(2)
3.2 The Painting Subject
179(2)
3.3 A Painter's Activity
181(2)
3.4 Reflective Painting
183(1)
3.5 Cezanne's Defining Unit
184(2)
3.6 Cezanne's Brushstrokes
186(1)
3.7 Particles in Painting
187(2)
3.8 Tyche
189(2)
4 Legal Semiotics (4): Theory in Law
191(12)
4.1 Articulation
191(1)
4.2 Legal Semiotics
192(2)
4.3 Texts and Discourse
194(1)
4.4 Law and Theory
195(1)
4.5 Theory
196(1)
4.6 Deep Structures
196(1)
4.7 The Culture of Particles
197(1)
4.8 Partition
198(1)
References
199(4)
5 Partitions
203(48)
1 Particles and Wholeness
203(5)
1.1 The Power of Partitioning
203(1)
1.2 Partitioning and the "I"
204(1)
1.3 Wholeness and the Particle
204(2)
1.4 A Coagulation of Parts
206(2)
2 Meaning Holism
208(5)
2.1 Quantum Thinking
209(1)
2.2 Meaning Holism Reconsidered
210(3)
3 Thinking Axes
213(3)
3.1 Five Topics
213(3)
4 Bohmian Holism
216(7)
4.1 Holism in Debate
217(1)
4.2 Reductionism
218(1)
4.3 Thinking Risks
219(1)
4.4 Parts and Wholes
220(1)
4.5 Metaphor and Metonymy
221(2)
5 The Quantum Challenge
223(5)
5.1 Wholeness and Knowledge
224(1)
5.2 The Quantum Challenge and Articulation
225(3)
6 Meaning as Constellation
228(10)
6.1 Meanings Layered
229(1)
6.2 First Person Singular
230(1)
6.3 Psychologism
231(1)
6.4 Force Field Meaning
232(1)
6.5 Word and Words
233(1)
6.6 Words, Layers, Meaning
234(3)
6.7 Meaning Complexity
237(1)
7 Legal Semiotics (5): Law's Expressivity
238(13)
7.1 Partitions and the Power of Understanding
238(1)
7.2 Meaning Complexity
239(1)
7.3 Modes of Discourse
240(2)
7.4 Word, and Legal Meaning
242(2)
7.5 In the Shadow of Meaning
244(1)
7.6 Partitions and Parallels
245(1)
7.7 A Summary on Semiotics
246(2)
References
248(3)
6 Meaning in a New Key
251(28)
1 Haeckel's Slogan
252(3)
1.1 Recapitulation Writ Large
252(1)
1.2 BoMbr and MBobr
253(2)
2 Neocortex and Narrativity
255(5)
2.1 Neocortex, Brains and Language
255(2)
2.2 Brain Development and Narrativity
257(2)
2.3 Preliminary Conclusions
259(1)
3 Approaching Creation
260(6)
3.1 Silence
261(1)
3.2 Language
262(1)
3.3 Articulation
263(3)
4 Force Lines of a Great Partition: Fall and Articulation
266(6)
4.1 The Paradise Story
267(2)
4.2 Names to Language
269(2)
4.3 Attitude Change
271(1)
5 Mirroring Partitions
272(7)
5.1 Roadblocks
273(3)
5.2 The Great Partition
276(2)
References
278(1)
Author Index 279(4)
Subject Index 283
Professor Broekman has authored more than 30 books and 500 scientific articles on law and legal theory, philosophy of medicine, contemporary philosophy, semiotics, education, culture and politics in 13 languages, including, with Penn State Law professor Larry Catà Backer: Lawyers Making Meaning, (Springer, 2013) and also with Professor Backer, Signs in LawA Source Book (Springer, 2014).  

From 2007-2013, he established and directed the Roberta Kevelson Seminar on Law and Semiotics at the Dickinson School of Law. The seminar inspired two Special Issues of the International Journal for the Semiotics of Law in 2009 and 2010.  In addition, he is supervising the preparation of the Kevelson Archive, designed to provide deeper insight and research into the origins and dimensions of semiotics in U.S. law.

Professor Broekman studied Social Sciences/Law in Leiden, The Netherlands, and Philosophy/Psychiatry and Education in Göttingen, Germany, where he obtained his Ph.D. in 1961. From 1961 to 1966, he was vice-director of The Hague Social Academy, The Netherlands; from 1966 to 1968, Associate Professor Contemporary Philosophy and Aesthetics at the University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands; and, from 1968 to 1996, Professor of Contemporary Philosophy at the Higher Institute of Philosophy (HIW) and Professor of Philosophy of Law, Legal Theory, and EU Law at the K.U. Leuven, Belgium. He also served as Dean of the Leuven Faculty of Law from 1988 to 1991 and Pro-Dean from 1991 to 1994. 

He was a Visiting Professor of Law at the University of Illinois College of Law, Champaign/Urbana, from 1998 to 2005, where he taught Civil Law and EU Law and directed a seminar on law and bioethics. 

Professor Broekman was nominated an Honorary Professor at the Universidad Nacional de Argentina, Mar del Plata, Argentina, in 1991, teaching Philosophy of Law, EU/Mercosur Relations and Comparative Bioethics.