Knowing a Language – What Sort of “Knowing” Is It? Cover Image
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Knowing a Language – What Sort of “Knowing” Is It?
Knowing a Language – What Sort of “Knowing” Is It?

Author(s): Horst Ruthrof
Subject(s): Analytic Philosophy, Philosophy of Language
Published by: Addleton Academic Publishers
Keywords: intentional acts; aboutness; categorial relations; voice; Bedeutung; Sinn;

Summary/Abstract: “Knowing a Language” addresses a topic that has received attention especially in the analytical branches of language philosophy. First, the paper discusses some prominent analytical observations as well as selected positions in semiotics, semiology, and linguistics before turning to a post-Husserlian response by way of a description of the intentional acts that we cannot but perform when we use language. The holistic, eidetic portrait of language that emerges is conceived within Husserl’s extended meaning chain, stretching from nonverbal meaning intention and its pre-syntactic categorial relations via their displacement by merely verbal sense, Husserl’s Bedeutung, to their nonverbal, vividly imaginable, proximate reconstruction in Husserl’s Sinn. Meanings are viewed as neither public nor private, but rather as indirectly public on the grounds that they combine of necessity individual instantiations of expressions under the communal coercion of the linguistic linkage compulsion. Thus, the paper provides an alternative explanation of what is involved in knowing how to link the sounds of linguistic utterances with community-sanctioned meanings.

  • Issue Year: 2020
  • Issue No: 19
  • Page Range: 7-30
  • Page Count: 24
  • Language: English
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