24â28 August 2020
UniversitĂ Cattolica del Sacro Cuore
Milan, Italy
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24â28 August 2020
UniversitĂ Cattolica del Sacro Cuore
Milan, Italy
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3â5 March 2020
Universidad Nacional de La Pampa
Instituto de Linguistica
Coronel Gil 353, 3Âș piso
L6304DWP Santa Rosa
La Pampa, Argentina
Abstract deadline: 1 November 2019
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Jane Simpson
Australian National University
In colonial Australia (1788â1901), only about a dozen women are recorded as documenting Australian languages, compared with nearly 300 women contributors to herbariums (Maroske and Vaughan 2014), and with the 100 or so men who contributed to the two main nineteenth-century Australian Indigenous vocabulary collections (Curr 1886â1887; Smyth 1876). Why were plants more attractive than languages? Read more ›
Alexander Teixeira Kalkhoff
UniversitÀt Freiburg
The mutual interaction, i.e. attraction and repulsion, of bodies across space without direct mechanical contact, such as the movement of planets, gravity, magnetism, electricity, or light, posed a theoretical and practical problem for physics until the middle of the nineteenth century (see for what follows about physical fields McMullin 2002). Up until that time, Newtonian mechanics provided generally accepted basic assumptions about the nature of matter and its movement, such as the dualism of matter and acting forces and the static space and absolute time. Movements of physical bodies across space were conceived as mathematical dispositions over the space that could be calculated and observed, but their driving forces were not understood.
Between 1839 and 1855, Michael Faraday published his three volumes on Experimental Researches in Electricity, in which Faraday introduces the notion of field for the first time. Only a few years later, in 1865, James Clerk Maxwell published A Dynamical Theory of the Electromagnetic Field, in which he unified the theories of electricity and magnetism to electromagnetism. At the latest by this point, the notion of field was introduced into modern physics with wide-reaching consequences that led to Albert Einsteinâs theory of relativity. A physical field is defined as an area of influence of forces. That means that a field is a function of the acting forces, and these forces or energy are equivalent to matter (see Einsteinâs famous equation E = mc2). The former Newtonian dualism of matter and force was suspended.
A new concept appears in physics, the most important invention since Newtonâs time: the field. It needed great scientific imagination to realize that it is not the charges nor the particles but the field in the space between the charges and particles which is essential for the description of physical phenomena. The field concept proves most successful and leads to the formulation of Maxwellâs equations describing the structure of the electromagnetic field and governing the electric as well as the optical phenomena. The theory of relativity arises from the field problems.
(Einstein & Infeld 1938: 258s.)
In 1905, Albert Einstein published Zur Elektrodynamik bewegter Körper and in 1916 Die Grundlagen der allgemeinen RelativitĂ€tstheorie, in which he formulates the axioms of the special and general theories of relativity. The quintessence of Einsteinian relativity is that all laws of nature are the same regardless of whether the observer moves or not. Hence, Einsteinâs theory of relativity completely relativized the reference system of a four-dimensional space-time and postulates the invariance of the speed of light and all other natural laws therein. As a consequence, we can never identify the observerâs absolute movement and there is no static space nor absolute time.
Hence, at the beginning of the twentieth century, there were two seminal concepts in modern physics, the notion of field and the notion of relativity. Interestingly, only shortly after that, in the 1920s and 1930s, psychological and linguistic theories appeared in Germany and the U.S. using field-like and relativity-like metaphors: e.g., gestalt theoryâs explicit linking to physical field theory (Köhler 1920), Leo Weisgerberâs inhaltsbezogene Grammatik (âcontent-related grammarâ) and inter-world view (Weisgerber 1924), Edward Sapirâs relational phonological theory (Sapir 1925), Jost Trierâs Wortfeldtheorie (âlexical field theoryâ) (Trier 1931), Karl BĂŒhlerâs Zeigfeld (âdeixisâ) and Symbolfeld (âsymbolic fieldâ) (BĂŒhler 1934) and his word gestalt-based phonology (BĂŒhler 1931 and 1934), Kurt Lewinâs field theory of personality and vector psychology (Lewin 1931, 1935, and 1963), and, much more loosely, the concept of linguistic relativity, also called the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis (Whorf 1956). They all appeared as innovative approaches to a mainstream science mainly characterized by positivism in the context of holism, gestalt theory, psychology of perception, new idealisms, Wilhelm von Humboldtâs idea of innere Sprachform (âinner speech-formâ), philosophical phenomenology, psychophysics, and modern physics (Meyer-Abich 1989; Teixeira Kalkhoff in press), emphasizing dynamical aspects of linguistic meaning, understanding, and personality resulting from acting field forces and sensitive to the context and environment in which they appear. Read more ›
Andrew Ji Ma
Southern University of Science and Technology, China
John Hart (c. 1501â1574) is a remarkable figure in the history of British linguistic thought. Along with Thomas Smith (1513â1577), William Bullokar (c. 1531â1609), and Richard Mulcaster (1531/2â1611), he is one of the most important orthographers in the sixteenth century when English spelling questions were becoming central to discussions of the vernacular. The sixteenth century saw the publication of the first group of books dedicated to systematic study of the English language which began with the movement of orthographic reform. In the history of British linguistics, Hartâs An Orthographie (1569) has a special status: it is the first treatise not only focusing on the study of the English language but also published in English (rather than Latin which was the academic lingua franca in Western Europe during that period). His three linguistic writings are outstanding in terms of both depth and breadth. To be specific, as one of the seminal orthographers of the Tudor period, he has detailed description of the English sounds and thus is widely recognised as the first phonetician of the English language in England. Moreover, his work is much richer than merely technical analysis of the languageâhis ideas about language are informed by the theory and practice of Tudor politics, which can be better understood by bringing together the technical, ideological, and rhetorical dimensions in one discussion. Read more ›
Friday 29 March
Rogers Room, Woolley Building, University of Sydney
Further information at the Sydney Centre for Language Research website Read more ›
Call for papers
SHESL-HTL CONFERENCE 2020
Paris, January 23-25, 2020
Simplicity and complexity of languages in the history of linguistic theories
The goal of this conference is to explore the ways in which, through the history of linguistic theories, languages have been evaluated in terms of their complexity.
Martin KonviÄka
Freie UniversitÀt Berlin
In this blog post, I will sketch the history of grammaticalisation clines. Hopper and Traugott (2003: 6) understand this concept as âa metaphor for the empirical observation that cross-linguistically forms tend to undergo the same kinds of changesâ. A prototypical cline, following Hopper and Traugott (2003: 7), looks as follows:
(1) content item > grammatical word > clitic > inflectional affix
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