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Ten Lectures on Cognitive Construction of Meaning Approx. XII, 226 Pp. ed. [Kõva köide]

As we think and talk, rich arrays of mental spaces and connections between them are constructed unconsciously. Conceptual integration of mental spaces leads to new meaning, global insight, and compressions useful for memory and creativity. A powerful aspect of conceptual integration networks is the dynamic emergence of novel structure in all areas of human life (science, religion, art, ...). The emergence of complex metaphors creates our conceptualization of time. The same operations play a role in material culture generally. Technology evolves to produce cultural human artefacts such as watches, gauges, compasses, airplane cockpit displays, with structure specifically designed to match conceptual inputs and integrate with them into stable blended frames of perception and action that can be memorized, learned by new generations, and thus culturally transmitted.
Note on Supplementary Material vii
Preface viii
About the Author x
1 Mental Spaces
1(23)
2 Conceptual Integration
24(28)
3 Causal Compressions in Language and Thought
52(22)
4 Emergent Structure in Conceptual Networks
74(20)
5 Metaphor and Conceptual Blending
94(24)
6 Integration and Grammatical Constructions
118(22)
7 Origins of Language
140(20)
8 Material Culture and Meaning Construction
160(22)
9 Generalized Integration Networks
182(23)
10 Methods and Generalizations in Linguistics
205(24)
About the Series Editor 229(1)
Websites for Cognitive Linguistics and CIFCL Speakers 230
Gilles Fauconnier is Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Cognitive Science at the University of California San Diego. Ph.D. 1971, UCSD, Docteur ès Lettres 1976, Paris. He is Guggenheim Fellow and Fulbright scholar. His books include Mental Spaces, Mappings in Thought and Language, and The Way We Think.