Cognitive Linguistic
1.Cognitive Linguistics
• • • •
Goals of module The struห้องสมุดไป่ตู้ture of this module Course Content Cognitive Linguistics: An Introduction
Goals of this module
Some guidance
• These following "Ts" may help you to successfully and more efficiently organize your groupwork. In each neighbourhood, at least one student (or better, two) should be in charge of one of these "Ts" when working in groups: • Task (Stay focused on the task) • Teamwork (Make sure that all group members are involved) • Take notes (Write down your findings) • Time management (Make sure you are done with the worksheet within the time limit you have agreed on in the beginning) • Talk (Talk to each other and make sure to appoint one student to represent your group in the meeting with the lecturer)
认知语言学解读
• 戴浩一:台湾国立中正大学语言学研究所教授, 是少数专长于认知语言学的华人。
• 王士元:香港中文大学现代语言学系暨中研院院 士,另一少数专长于认知语言学的华人。
二、认知语言学的主要概念
• 原型 • 范畴化、基本范畴 • 上下位 • 隐喻模式、转喻模式
孕育,80年代中期以后开始成熟。1987年,美国
莱考夫《范畴》的出版,标志着认知语言学的形
成;1989年,勒内·德尔文组织的在德国杜伊斯堡
召开的第一届国际认知语言学大会标志着认知语
言学的正式诞生。90年代中期以后,认知语言学
开始进入稳步发展阶段。
• 认知语言学代表人物
• 乔治·雷可夫 (George P. Lakoff1941年-):认知语言 学的其中一位创立者,提倡比喻(隐喻)是日常语言 活动中的必须认知能力。
• 2.范畴化:
范畴化,也叫做归类,是比较的一个特例。 一个范畴或类别往往有个“原型”,是用以确定 类别的参照标准,需要归类的目标与标准进行比 较,符合标准所有特征的目标例示这一标准,不 完全符合的目标是对标准的扩展。
范畴化,简单地说,就是把不同的事物归为同 一类型的过程。例如:人有各种各样的人,我们把 不同的人统称为“人”,这就是一种范畴化。
认知语言学 Cognitive linguistics
目录
一、什么是认知语言学(定义、 背景、代表人物)
二、认知语言学的主要概念 三、思考探究 四、认知语言学的优与缺 五、认知语言学在中国
一、什么是认知语言学
•
认知语言学是语言学的一门分支学科,它在
反对主流语言学转换生成语法的基础上诞生,在
Cognitive LinguisticsPPT课件
• Human categories appear to be fuzzy with some members of the category appearing to be more central (i.e. more prototypical) and others more peripheral (i.e. less prototypical). There is a degree of centrality.
It is an approach to language that is based on our experience of the world and the way we perceive and conceptualize it.
Construal & Construal Operations
认知语言学1
这些识解以我们实际上站在不同的角度去观察自行车 和汽车为前提。
3.Categorization (范畴化)
Categorization is the process of classifying our experiences into different categories based on commonalities and differences. 范畴化是基于人类经验的异同将我们的经验划分成 不同的类型。 •There are three levels in categories: the basic level, the super-ordinate level, and the subordinate level.
The figure-ground alignment seems to apply to space with the ground as the prepositional object and the preposition expressing the spatial relational configuration. It also applies to our perception of moving objects. Since the moving object is typically the most prominent one, because it is moving, it is typically the figure, while the remaining stimuli constituent the ground.图形-背景关系似乎可以运用于空间研究,背景充当
约翰逊把意象图式定义为通过感知的相互作用和运动 程序获得的对事物经验给以连贯和结构的循环出现的 动态模式。
chapter 10 Cognitive Linguistics
1. Introduction Philosophical foundation: Experiential realism经验现实主义 cognitive world or cognitive structure.
1. Introduction Psychological foundation: Interactionism:
BIRD: +2 wings, +2 legs, +feathers …
Binary division of the world Clear boundaries All members have equal status
2.1 The classical theory 古典理论
Shortages: a. sometimes, there is no clear-cut boundaries between categories b. the status of members are not equal e.g. RECTANGLE
George Lakoff, Women, Fire and Dangerous Things —— What Categories Reveal About the Mind <女人、火和危险 事物——范畴揭示了思维的什么奥秘> 1987 George Lakoff & Mark Johnson, Metaphor We Live By 我 们赖以生存的隐喻 1980
cognition originates from the interaction between subject and object, cognitive structure is postnatally constructed, intelligence and knowledge comes from postnatal experience and practice.
认知语言学
学科发展历程
认知语言学在20世纪70年代中期开始在美国孕育(朗 奴·兰盖克提出空间语法),80年代中期以后开始成熟, 其学派地位得以确立,其确立标志为1989年春由勒内·德 尔文(ReneDirven) 组织的在德国杜伊斯堡(Duisbury) 召 开的第一届国际认知语言学大会。此次大会宣布于1990年 发行《认知语言学》杂志, 成立国际认知语言学( ICLA) , 出版认知语言学研究的系列专著,90年代中期以后开始进 入稳步个特例。一个范 畴或类别往往有个“原型”,是用以确定类别的参照标准, 需要归类的目标与标准进行比较,符合标准所有特征的目 标例示(instantiate)这一标准,不完全符合的目标是 对标准的扩展(extension)。
经典范畴理论的如下特征 1 范畴划分由一组充分必 要条件决定 2 特征是二元 3 范畴具有清晰边界 4 范畴 成员之间地位平等。
eg2.钟书能 阮薇. 认知与忠实——汉英上下位词翻译的认知 视角『j』.韶关学院学报
3.上下位:
以基本层次范畴为中心 范畴可以向上发展为上位范畴向 下发展为下位范畴上位范畴依赖于基本层次范畴 且物体 的完形形象和大部分属性都来自基本层次范畴 因此又被 称为寄生范畴(parasiticcategory) 下位范畴也是寄生范 畴它是在基本层次范畴的基础上更进一步细致的切分。
二、认知语言学的主要概念
原型 范畴化、基本范畴、上下位 命题模式、意象模式、隐喻模式、转喻模式 意象图示
1.原型(prototype):
是物体范畴最好、最 典型的成员, 所有其他成 员也均具有不同程度的典 型性。
eg1. 在英语的世界图景中, 鸟的原型为画眉鸟;而对于 母语为俄语的人而言则是 麻雀; 麻雀在中国人的认 知意义中也具有典型意义。
cognitive linguistics
约翰逊把意象图式定义为通过感知的相互作用和运动 程序获得的对事物经验给以连贯和结构的循环出现的 动态模式。
Image schematic structures have two characteristconceptual schematic structures emerging from our bodily experience; 2) they are constantly operating in our perceptual interaction, bodily movement through space, and physical manipulation of objects.
2.Construal (识解) & Construal Operations (识解操作)
Construal is the ability to conceive and portray the same situation in alternate ways through specificity, different mental scanning, directionality, vantage point, figure-ground segregation etc.识解,一种在特异性,心理扫描, 定向性,优势地位以及图形与背景的分离等多种不 同的方式下理解和描绘相同的情景的能力。
其特征体现在以下四个方面(克劳褔特和克鲁兹): 1 由行为相互作用产生典型范式的最具包容性的层次。 2 构成清晰图像的最具包容性的层次。 3 代表部分-整体信息的最具包容性的层次。 4 为日常参考所提供的层次。
3.2 Superordinate level 上位层次范畴
Superordinate categories are the most general ones. The members of a superordinate category do not have enough features in common to conjure up a common gestalt at this level. 其特征体现在以下四个方面(Croft and cruse):
认知语言学
认知语言学代表人物及代表作
乔治·雷可夫 (George P. Lakoff;/ˈleɪˌkɔf/,1941年-):认知语言 学的其中一位创立者,提倡比喻(隐喻)是日常语言活动中的必须认知能 力。
马克·詹森 (Mark Johnson:
朗奴·兰盖克 (Ronald Langacker,1942年12月27日-):认知文法的提 倡者
eg2.钟书能 阮薇. 认知与忠实——汉英上下位词翻译的认知 视角『j』.韶关学院学报
3.上下位:
以基本层次范畴为中心 范畴可以向上发展为上位范畴向 下发展为下位范畴上位范畴依赖于基本层次范畴 且物体 的完形形象和大部分属性都来自基本层次范畴 因此又被 称为寄生范畴(parasiticcategory) 下位范畴也是寄生范 畴它是在基本层次范畴的基础上更进一步细致的切分。
Gilles Fauconnier (1944年8月19日-)
Charles J. Fillmore
William Croft Michael Tomasello (1950年1月18日-)
戴浩一:台湾国立中正大学语言学研究所教授,是少数专长于认知语言 学的华人。
王士元:香港中文大学现代语言学系暨中研院院士,另一少数专长于认 知语言学的华人。
认知语言学 Cognitive linguistics
一、什么是认知语言学 二、认知语言学的主要概念 三、认知语法学 四、认知语言学的研究方法 五、认知语言学优与缺 六、认知语言学在中国
一、什么是认知语言学
认知语言学是语言学的一门分支学科它脱胎自认知心理 学或认知科学,大约在1980年代后期至1990年代开始成型。 认知语言学涉及电脑自然语言理解、人工智能、语言学、 心理学、系统论等多种学科,它针对当时仍很火热的生成 语言学,提出:语言的创建、学习及运用,从基本上都必 须能够透过人类的认知而加以解释,因为认知能力是人类
cognitive linguistics的定义
cognitive linguistics的定义
认知语言学(Cognitive Linguistics)是一种语言学理论,旨在研究语言的认知特征和语义的认知基础。
它探讨语言的认知结构、概念和思维对语言表达的影响。
认知语言学认为语言习得和使用都基于人类认知能力,语言是人类思维的产物,语言通过表达和传递概念和经验来构建和组织人类认知世界。
认知语言学的研究范围包括词汇语义、句法和语用等方面,致力于揭示语言和认知的密切关系,并通过研究语言的认知机制来深入理解人类思维和语言使用的本质。
cognitivelinguistics
What is cognitive linguistics?
Definition: Cognitive linguistics is an
approach to language that is based on our experience of the world and the way we perceive and conceptualize it.
What is cognitive linguistics?
Background of CL. 1.Academic background
1)reaction to TG represented by N.Chomsky (syntax), a direct stimulus 2)stumulated by cognitive science (cognitive psychology neurobiology), an indirect stimulus
Cognitive Models…
①ICM (认知模型: 理想化认知模式)
We organize our knowledge by means of structures called idealized cognitive model, or ICM. The ideas about cognitive models that we will be making use of have developed within cognitive linguistics and come from four sources. Each ICM is a complex structured whole, a gestalt, which uses four kinds of structuring principles:
认知功能语言学
认知功能语言学——Defining cognitive linguistics认知功能语言学⏹认知语言学简介⏹认知语言学的语言观及本质⏹认知语言学的属性⏹主要代表人物及流派⏹认知方式——比较/范畴化一、认知语言学简介⏹上世纪70年代,认知语言学研究兴起于美国西海岸,80年代开始活跃起来,继而扩展到西欧和全球,形成对乔姆斯基革命的又一场革命。
⏹1989年国际认知语言学学会成立,每两年举行一次会议,1990年起开始出版期刊Cognitive Linguistics。
⏹中国的认知语言学研究目前正方兴未艾。
几年前成立了中国认知语言学研究会,每两年举行一次会议。
二、认知语言学的语言观及本质语言观⏹认知语言学崇尚体验哲学,以建设性心智主义、互动论和联通论为心理学基础。
它批判语言天赋说,坚持从体验性认知的角度来解释语言。
⏹认知语言学认为,语言最重要的功能在于表达意义,语义必须置于语言研究的首位。
意义即概念化(conceptualization),是客观现实、身体体验、认知方式、知识框架等多种因素共同作用的结果。
它强调认知方式和主观性在语义形成中的作用,同时也重视社会文化和百科知识对于语义解读的必要性。
语言本质⏹认知语言学并非专门的理论,而是代表着一种或一组研究取向。
该领域的学者对语言的本质有着共同的看法,至少在以下三个方面具有一致性。
(Taylor)⏹第一,质疑乔姆斯基语言学提出的语言专用模块(language-specific module)说,认为语言能力内嵌于一般的认知能力和过程之中,心智(mind)中不存在独立的语言模块。
⏹第二,认为语言是一开放的系统,由一系列符号单位组成,符号单位分为语形(phonological)和语义(semantic)两个极,相当于索绪尔的能指和所指,因此,认知语言学是向索绪尔符号系统说的回归。
⏹第三,与第二点相联系,认为由语素组成的词项和词组成的短语,以及现时语法分析中常见的主语和动词、修饰和被修饰、主从等关系也是符号单位或符号结构,都是有意义的。
认知语言学
• 认知语言学代表人物
• 乔治· 雷可夫 (George P. Lakoff1941年-):认知语言 学的其中一位创立者,提倡比喻(隐喻)是日常语言 活动中的必须认知能力。 • 朗奴· 兰盖克 (Ronald Langacker,1942年12月27日-): 认知文法的提倡者。 • 戴浩一:台湾国立中正大学语言学研究所教授, 是少数专长于认知语言学的华人。 • 王士元:香港中文大学现代语言学系暨中研院院 士,另一少数专长于认知语言学的华人。
• 3.上下位:
以基本层次范畴为中心,范畴可向上发展为 上位,范畴向下发展为下位。
例如:Agriculture is the foundation of the national economy, We must follow the principle of combining。(农业是国民经济的 基础,我们要坚持农林牧副渔相结合的方针) 分析:第一个“农业”指的是农业经济,具 有广泛意义,因此译“agriculture”;第二个 “农业”具有专指意义,所以要译成下位词 “farming”,才能准确地表达原意。
二、认知语言学的主要概念
• 原型 • 范畴化、基本范畴 • 上下位 • 隐喻模式、转喻模式
• 1.原型(prototype):
原型范畴理论是认知语言学提出的重要观点 , 其哲学根源基于 “家族相似性 ”。它是物体范 畴最好、最典型的成员, 而其他成员有的典型性 显著,有的具有非典型性、处于范畴的边缘位置。 如:在“鸟”这个范畴中,知更鸟是最典型 的成员,因为它具有这个范畴的所有特性。而鸵 鸟、企鹅、蝙蝠则处于“鸟”的范畴的边缘位置, 它们和知更鸟共有的特性非常少。
• 四、认知语言学优与缺
• 1.优点
• • • • 提供自然的、符合人们语感的分析 注重概念化对语法的影响 对语言的共性和历史的成功解释 常利用图解的办法,准确而简明地把一个复杂的语 法范畴系统表达出来 • 洞察跨词类之间的共性 • 把动态的认知过程引入语法分析 • 确立语义和句法之间的“一对一”映射关系
Cognitive Linguistic
Linguistic Coursework---Cognitive LinguisticsLinguistic course/work-----Cognitive LinguisticsIntroductionCognitive Linguistics is a new approach to linguistics which appeared in the late 1980s and it has grown rapidly at home and abroad, and has gradually turned into the major school of linguistics. To cognitive linguists, language not only enables communication, but also reflects mankind’s conceptual world. In other words, linguistic categories not only enable us to communicate, but also impose a certain way of understanding of the world. It integrates the research ways of language typology and functional linguistics, depicting and elaborating the constitution of human language.Cognitive Linguistics presents a forum for high-quality linguistic research on topics which investigate the interaction between language and cognition. Compared with linguistic structuralism, which sparked off substitution drills, and speech act theory, which initiated a complete reorganization of teaching strategies, the impact of cognitive linguistics is much less revolutionary. Yet the influence of cognitive linguistics may prove very valuable, because it lends theoretical support to a number of accepted teaching approaches in the fields of both vocabulary and grammar.The most influential linguists focusing centrally on cognitive principles and organization were Wallace Chafe, Charles Fillmore, George Lakoff, Ronald Langacker, and Leonard Talmy etc. Masterpieces including: Handbook of Pragmatics、What Categories Reveal about the Mind、Metaphors we Live by、Foundations of Cognitive Grammar、An introduction to Cognitive Linguistics etc. At present, the study of cognitive linguistics is very active in Europe and the United States .Cognitive linguistics in the two research center in the United States has formed two different schools: Berkeley School( Lakoff、Fillmore、Kay、Sweetser) and San Diego School(Langacker、Fauconnier). The Foundations of Cognitive Grammar was written by Langacker, father of Cognitive Linguistics. This book introduces a new and fundamentally different conception of language structure and linguistic investigation.The central claim of cognitive grammar is that grammar forms a continuum with lexicon and is fully describable in terms of symbolic units (i.e. form-meaning pairings). In contrast to current orthodoxy, Langacker argues that grammar is not autonomous with respect to semantics, but rather reduces to patterns for the structuring and symbolization of conceptual content. "Understanding Langacker's grammar is made easier by the fact that, instead of using mathematical formalisms to prove his points, he uses common knowledge of language to persuade the reader. . . . The book is valuable for several factors in addition to its clarification of grammar. The insights into verbal thought and meaning are prime reasons for recommending the book to the semantically inclined."--Et ceteraI. Main theories of Cognitive LinguisticsOn the basis of non-objectivist philosophy, Cognitive Linguistics extensively assimilates the research findings and analytical methods of the disciplines studying humans ‘cognitive activities. Therefore, we need to have a better understanding of cognition and cognitive science.Cognition is the mental process caused in thinking, remembering, perceiving, recognizing, clarifying etc. Cognitive science is a discipline which draws on research in linguistics, psycholinguistics, and cognitive psychology and Artificial Intelligence. Cognitive Science deals with the scientific study of thinking reasoning and intellectual processes of the mind. It is concerned with how knowledge is represented in the mind, how language is understood and with what the mental processes underlying, inferencing, learning, problem-solving and planning. Cognitive linguistics is an approach to language that is based on our experience of the world and the way we perceive and conceptualize it. Because cognitive linguistics sees language as embedded in the overall cognitive capacities of man, topics of special interest for cognitive linguistics include: the structural characteristics of natural language categorization (such as prototypicality, systematic polysemy, cognitive models, mental imagery and metaphor); the functional principles of linguistic organization (such as iconicity and naturalness); the conceptual interface between syntax and semantics (as explored by cognitive grammar and construction grammar); theexperiential and pragmatic background of language-in-use; and the relationship between language and thought, including questions about relativism and conceptual universals. In this summary, Cognitive linguistics is divided into three main areas of study: Cognitive semantics, dealing mainly with lexical semantics, separating semantics (meaning) into meaning-construction and knowledge representation. Cognitive approaches to grammar, dealing mainly with syntax, morphology and other traditionally more grammar-oriented areas. Cognitive phonology,dealing with classification of various correspondences between morphemes and phonetic sequences.II. Language study methods of Cognitive LinguisticsCognitive Linguistics grew out of the work of a number of researchers active in the 1970s who were interested in the relation of language and mind, and who did not follow the prevailing tendency to explain linguistic patterns by means of appeals to structural properties internal to and specific to language. Rather than attempting to segregate syntax from the rest of language in a 'syntactic component' governed by a set of principles and elements specific to that component, the line of research followed instead was to examine the relation of language structure to things outside language: cognitive principles and mechanisms not specific to language, including principles of human categorization; pragmatic and interactional principles; and functional principles in general, such as iconicity and economy. Cognitive Linguists began developing their own approach to language description and linguistic theory, centered on a particular set of phenomena and concerns. One of the important assumptions shared by all of these scholars is that meaning is so central to language that it must be a primary focus of study. Linguistic structures serve the function of expressing meanings and hence the mappings between meaning and form are a prime subject of linguistic analysis. Linguistic forms, in this view, are closely linked to the semantic structures they are designed to express. Semantic structures of all meaningful linguistic units can and should be investigated. These views were in direct opposition to the ideas developing at the time within Chomskyan linguistics, in which meaning was 'interpretive' and peripheral to the study of language. The central objectof interest in language was syntax. The structures of language were in this view not driven by meaning, but instead were governed by principles essentially independent of meaning. Thus, the semantics associated with morphosyntactic structures did not require investigation; the focus was on language-internal structural principles as explanatory constructs.III. Features and Controversy of Cognitive LinguisticsCognitive linguistics is characterized by adherence to three central positions. First, it denies that there is anautonomous linguistic faculty in the mind; second, it understands grammar in terms of conceptualization; and third, it claims that knowledge of language arises out of language use. Cognitive linguists deny that the mind has any module for language-acquisition that is unique and autonomous. This stands in contrast to the stance adopted in the field of generative grammar. Although cognitive linguists do not necessarily deny that part of the human linguistic ability is innate, they deny that it is separate from the rest of cognition. They thus reject a body of opinion in cognitive science suggesting that there is evidence for the modularity of language. They argue that knowledge of linguistic phenomena —i.e., phonemes,morphemes, and syntax—is essentially conceptual in nature. Departing from the tradition of truth-conditional semantics, cognitive linguists view meaning in terms of conceptualization. Instead of viewing meaning in terms of models of the world, they view it in terms of mental spaces. Finally, cognitive linguistics argues that language is both embodied and situated in a specific environment. This can be considered a moderate offshoot of the Sapir–Whorf hypothesis, in that language and cognition mutually influence one another, and are both embedded in the experiences and environments of its users. However, there is significant peer review and debate within the field of linguistics regarding cognitive linguistics. Critics of cognitive linguistics have argued that most of the evidence from the cognitive view comes from the research in pragmatics and semantics on research into metaphor and preposition choice. They suggest that cognitive linguists should provide cognitive re-analyses of topics in syntax and phonology that are understood in terms of autonomous knowledge. There is also controversy and debate within the field concerning therepresentation and status of idioms in grammar and the actual mental grammar of speakers. On one hand it is asserted that idiom variation needs to be explained with regard to general and autonomous syntactic rules. Another view says such idioms do not constitute semantic units and can be processed compositionally.IV. Cognitive Linguistics in L2 teachingAt present, Cognitive Linguistics has been widely recognized in the world. There have been a large number of scholars and experts in cognitive linguistics, and a number of Cognitive Science Colleges have been established in the United States and other European countries. Cognitive Linguistics has made a positive contribution to the development of modern linguistics. Compared with other linguistic theories, cognitive linguistics is new and has had little influence on language teaching and learning .Yet it provides a new perspective on language, especially on vocabulary and grammar.In vocabulary teaching, it has slways been a golden rule that we should teach the words for basic level categories to the children first. Cognitive Linguistics reviews that we approach hierarchies of classifications from the center, that we concentrate on basic level categories such as dogs and cats and that our hierarchies are anchored in these basic level categories, These basic categories words correspond to the core vocabulary in a language, and they play an important role in daily life communication. There is a pitfall in English vocabulary learning, i.e. , some people pursue the quantity of vocabulary and neglect the quality of the core vocabulary learning. The result is that although these people can memorize a lot of difficult words, they still cannot read or wrote properly.The findings in cognitive linguistics are also useful in teaching grammar. We can choose a cognitive approach to grammar that is based on schemata, on prototypes or on basic level categories. One prominent characteristic shared by these approaches is that they all manage to bridge the gap between formal syntax and morphology on the one hand and the semantic aspects of grammar on the other by relating them both to a common conceptual basis. This liberation from the form/content division is probably the most important contribution that cognitive linguistics has made to pedagogicalgrammar and language teaching.V. ConclusionCognitive linguistics involves a wide range of disciplines,with abundant research content and novel subjects, and bears the unparalleled advantages compared with other linguistic theories.Therefore, we need not only comprehend its basic principles, but also apply them to analyze the branches of linguistics, directing at the hot issues which have just emerged in cognitive linguistics. Since this linguistic theory itself is in constant change, and because of its methodological problems and theoretical problems, there is a long way before it becomes a mature theory for language teaching and learning. Nevertheless it remains the most prospective and promising area of research.Reference1. Langacker, Ronald W. 1987. Foundations of Cognitive Grammar Vol. 1: Theoretical Prerequisites. Stanford: Stanford University Press.2. Langacker, Ronald W. 1990. Concept, Image, and Symbol. The Cognitive Basis of Grammar. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.3. Randal Holme. 2011 Cognitive Linguistics and Language Teaching. Foreign Language Teaching and Research Press4. F.Ungerer&H.J.Schmid. 2008. An Introduction to Cognitive Linguistics. Foreign Language Teaching and Research Press5. George Lakoff.2007. Ten Lectures on Cognitive Linguistics by George Lakoff. Foreign Language Teaching and Research Press。
认知语言学_Cognitive_Linguistics
Lecture 1认知语言学An Introduction to Cognitive LinguisticsⅠ. Introduction1.What is Cognitive Linguistics?Cognitive linguistics (CL) refers to the branch of linguistics that interprets language in terms of the concepts, sometimes universal, sometimes specific to a particular tongue, which underlie its forms. It is thus closely associated with semantics but is distinct from psycholinguistics, which draws upon empirical findings from cognitive psychology in order to explain the mental processes that underlie the acquisition, storage, production and understanding of speech and writing. Cognitive linguistics is characterized by adherence to three major hypotheses as guiding the cognitive linguistic approach to language:1) Language is not an autonomous cognitive faculty; (语言不是自主的认知能力)2) grammar is conceptualization; (语法是概念化)3) knowledge of language arises out of language use.(语言知识来源于语言的使用)Cognitive linguists deny that the mind has any module for language-acquisition that is unique and autonomous. This stands in contrast to the stance adopted in the field of generative grammar. Although cognitive linguists do not necessarily deny that part of the human linguistic ability is innate, they deny that it is separate from the rest of cognition. They thus reject a body of opinion in cognitive science which suggests that there is evidence for the modularity of language. They argue that knowledge of linguistic phenomena —i.e., phonemes, morphemes, and syntax —is essentially conceptual in nature. However, they assert that the storage and retrieval of linguistic data is not significantly different from the storage and retrieval of other knowledge, and that use of language in understanding employs similar cognitive abilities to those used in other non-linguistic tasks.Departing from the tradition of truth-conditional semantics, cognitive linguists view meaning in terms of conceptualization. Instead of viewing meaning in terms of models of the world, they view it in terms of mental spaces.Finally, cognitive linguistics argues that language is both embodied and situated in a specific environment. This can be considered a moderate offshoot of the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis, (The linguistic relativity principle , also known as the Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis, is the idea that the varying cultural concepts and categories inherent in different languages affect the cognitive classification of the experienced world in such a way that speakers of different languages think and behave differently because of it.)in that language and cognition mutually influence one another, and are both embedded in the experiences and environments of its users.2.认知语言学的诞生(The birth of cognitive linguistics)A.起始阶段(The initial stage)认知语言学兴起于20世纪70年代,20世纪80年代以后迅猛发展。
Cognitive Linguistics
• A dog (or a tree for that matter) stands for all the characteristics of the species it refers to. The special term for this phenomenon is called category. The mental process of classification is called categorization, which is one of the important capabilities of the human mind.
• In the definition of a category, one of the two values, either [+] or [--], can be used. For example, the BIRD category has the feature [+two legs], but [-four legs]. This means that a feature is either in the definition of a category, or it is not; an entity either has this feature, or it does not. That is, features are binary. This is the second assumption.
• As a new approach to the study of language and mind, cognitive linguistics began to appear in the 1970s and has been increasingly active since the 1980s. The interesting topics of cognitive linguistics include • the structural characteristics of natural language categorization (such as what is a prototype, metaphor, mental imagery, and cognitive models), • the functional principles of linguistic organization (such as iconicity and naturalness),
10_Cognitive_Linguistics1
2.2 ห้องสมุดไป่ตู้he prototype theory
Categorization is something that underlies the mental processes of language comprehension and language production. 2.2.1 Two ways to understand the notion of prototype: 1) It can be deduced from categorization experiments e.g. some members of a category first come to mind and are recognized more rapidly than other category members in verification tasks
Traditionally, the conditions were thought to be sensory or perceptual in nature. The “conditions” in the definition are also called features. The features are necessary in that no entity that does not possess the full set is a member of the category, and they are sufficient in that possession of all the features guarantees membership. In short, category membership is an ‘all-or-nothing’ affair.
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Linguistic Coursework---Cognitive LinguisticsLinguistic course/work-----Cognitive LinguisticsIntroductionCognitive Linguistics is a new approach to linguistics which appeared in the late 1980s and it has grown rapidly at home and abroad, and has gradually turned into the major school of linguistics. To cognitive linguists, language not only enables communication, but also reflects mankind’s conceptual world. In other words, linguistic categories not only enable us to communicate, but also impose a certain way of understanding of the world. It integrates the research ways of language typology and functional linguistics, depicting and elaborating the constitution of human language.Cognitive Linguistics presents a forum for high-quality linguistic research on topics which investigate the interaction between language and cognition. Compared with linguistic structuralism, which sparked off substitution drills, and speech act theory, which initiated a complete reorganization of teaching strategies, the impact of cognitive linguistics is much less revolutionary. Yet the influence of cognitive linguistics may prove very valuable, because it lends theoretical support to a number of accepted teaching approaches in the fields of both vocabulary and grammar.The most influential linguists focusing centrally on cognitive principles and organization were Wallace Chafe, Charles Fillmore, George Lakoff, Ronald Langacker, and Leonard Talmy etc. Masterpieces including: Handbook of Pragmatics、What Categories Reveal about the Mind、Metaphors we Live by、Foundations of Cognitive Grammar、An introduction to Cognitive Linguistics etc. At present, the study of cognitive linguistics is very active in Europe and the United States .Cognitive linguistics in the two research center in the United States has formed two different schools: Berkeley School( Lakoff、Fillmore、Kay、Sweetser) and San Diego School(Langacker、Fauconnier). The Foundations of Cognitive Grammar was written by Langacker, father of Cognitive Linguistics. This book introduces a new and fundamentally different conception of language structure and linguistic investigation.The central claim of cognitive grammar is that grammar forms a continuum with lexicon and is fully describable in terms of symbolic units (i.e. form-meaning pairings). In contrast to current orthodoxy, Langacker argues that grammar is not autonomous with respect to semantics, but rather reduces to patterns for the structuring and symbolization of conceptual content. "Understanding Langacker's grammar is made easier by the fact that, instead of using mathematical formalisms to prove his points, he uses common knowledge of language to persuade the reader. . . . The book is valuable for several factors in addition to its clarification of grammar. The insights into verbal thought and meaning are prime reasons for recommending the book to the semantically inclined."--Et ceteraI. Main theories of Cognitive LinguisticsOn the basis of non-objectivist philosophy, Cognitive Linguistics extensively assimilates the research findings and analytical methods of the disciplines studying humans ‘cognitive activities. Therefore, we need to have a better understanding of cognition and cognitive science.Cognition is the mental process caused in thinking, remembering, perceiving, recognizing, clarifying etc. Cognitive science is a discipline which draws on research in linguistics, psycholinguistics, and cognitive psychology and Artificial Intelligence. Cognitive Science deals with the scientific study of thinking reasoning and intellectual processes of the mind. It is concerned with how knowledge is represented in the mind, how language is understood and with what the mental processes underlying, inferencing, learning, problem-solving and planning. Cognitive linguistics is an approach to language that is based on our experience of the world and the way we perceive and conceptualize it. Because cognitive linguistics sees language as embedded in the overall cognitive capacities of man, topics of special interest for cognitive linguistics include: the structural characteristics of natural language categorization (such as prototypicality, systematic polysemy, cognitive models, mental imagery and metaphor); the functional principles of linguistic organization (such as iconicity and naturalness); the conceptual interface between syntax and semantics (as explored by cognitive grammar and construction grammar); theexperiential and pragmatic background of language-in-use; and the relationship between language and thought, including questions about relativism and conceptual universals. In this summary, Cognitive linguistics is divided into three main areas of study: Cognitive semantics, dealing mainly with lexical semantics, separating semantics (meaning) into meaning-construction and knowledge representation. Cognitive approaches to grammar, dealing mainly with syntax, morphology and other traditionally more grammar-oriented areas. Cognitive phonology,dealing with classification of various correspondences between morphemes and phonetic sequences.II. Language study methods of Cognitive LinguisticsCognitive Linguistics grew out of the work of a number of researchers active in the 1970s who were interested in the relation of language and mind, and who did not follow the prevailing tendency to explain linguistic patterns by means of appeals to structural properties internal to and specific to language. Rather than attempting to segregate syntax from the rest of language in a 'syntactic component' governed by a set of principles and elements specific to that component, the line of research followed instead was to examine the relation of language structure to things outside language: cognitive principles and mechanisms not specific to language, including principles of human categorization; pragmatic and interactional principles; and functional principles in general, such as iconicity and economy. Cognitive Linguists began developing their own approach to language description and linguistic theory, centered on a particular set of phenomena and concerns. One of the important assumptions shared by all of these scholars is that meaning is so central to language that it must be a primary focus of study. Linguistic structures serve the function of expressing meanings and hence the mappings between meaning and form are a prime subject of linguistic analysis. Linguistic forms, in this view, are closely linked to the semantic structures they are designed to express. Semantic structures of all meaningful linguistic units can and should be investigated. These views were in direct opposition to the ideas developing at the time within Chomskyan linguistics, in which meaning was 'interpretive' and peripheral to the study of language. The central objectof interest in language was syntax. The structures of language were in this view not driven by meaning, but instead were governed by principles essentially independent of meaning. Thus, the semantics associated with morphosyntactic structures did not require investigation; the focus was on language-internal structural principles as explanatory constructs.III. Features and Controversy of Cognitive LinguisticsCognitive linguistics is characterized by adherence to three central positions. First, it denies that there is anautonomous linguistic faculty in the mind; second, it understands grammar in terms of conceptualization; and third, it claims that knowledge of language arises out of language use. Cognitive linguists deny that the mind has any module for language-acquisition that is unique and autonomous. This stands in contrast to the stance adopted in the field of generative grammar. Although cognitive linguists do not necessarily deny that part of the human linguistic ability is innate, they deny that it is separate from the rest of cognition. They thus reject a body of opinion in cognitive science suggesting that there is evidence for the modularity of language. They argue that knowledge of linguistic phenomena —i.e., phonemes,morphemes, and syntax—is essentially conceptual in nature. Departing from the tradition of truth-conditional semantics, cognitive linguists view meaning in terms of conceptualization. Instead of viewing meaning in terms of models of the world, they view it in terms of mental spaces. Finally, cognitive linguistics argues that language is both embodied and situated in a specific environment. This can be considered a moderate offshoot of the Sapir–Whorf hypothesis, in that language and cognition mutually influence one another, and are both embedded in the experiences and environments of its users. However, there is significant peer review and debate within the field of linguistics regarding cognitive linguistics. Critics of cognitive linguistics have argued that most of the evidence from the cognitive view comes from the research in pragmatics and semantics on research into metaphor and preposition choice. They suggest that cognitive linguists should provide cognitive re-analyses of topics in syntax and phonology that are understood in terms of autonomous knowledge. There is also controversy and debate within the field concerning therepresentation and status of idioms in grammar and the actual mental grammar of speakers. On one hand it is asserted that idiom variation needs to be explained with regard to general and autonomous syntactic rules. Another view says such idioms do not constitute semantic units and can be processed compositionally.IV. Cognitive Linguistics in L2 teachingAt present, Cognitive Linguistics has been widely recognized in the world. There have been a large number of scholars and experts in cognitive linguistics, and a number of Cognitive Science Colleges have been established in the United States and other European countries. Cognitive Linguistics has made a positive contribution to the development of modern linguistics. Compared with other linguistic theories, cognitive linguistics is new and has had little influence on language teaching and learning .Yet it provides a new perspective on language, especially on vocabulary and grammar.In vocabulary teaching, it has slways been a golden rule that we should teach the words for basic level categories to the children first. Cognitive Linguistics reviews that we approach hierarchies of classifications from the center, that we concentrate on basic level categories such as dogs and cats and that our hierarchies are anchored in these basic level categories, These basic categories words correspond to the core vocabulary in a language, and they play an important role in daily life communication. There is a pitfall in English vocabulary learning, i.e. , some people pursue the quantity of vocabulary and neglect the quality of the core vocabulary learning. The result is that although these people can memorize a lot of difficult words, they still cannot read or wrote properly.The findings in cognitive linguistics are also useful in teaching grammar. We can choose a cognitive approach to grammar that is based on schemata, on prototypes or on basic level categories. One prominent characteristic shared by these approaches is that they all manage to bridge the gap between formal syntax and morphology on the one hand and the semantic aspects of grammar on the other by relating them both to a common conceptual basis. This liberation from the form/content division is probably the most important contribution that cognitive linguistics has made to pedagogicalgrammar and language teaching.V. ConclusionCognitive linguistics involves a wide range of disciplines,with abundant research content and novel subjects, and bears the unparalleled advantages compared with other linguistic theories.Therefore, we need not only comprehend its basic principles, but also apply them to analyze the branches of linguistics, directing at the hot issues which have just emerged in cognitive linguistics. Since this linguistic theory itself is in constant change, and because of its methodological problems and theoretical problems, there is a long way before it becomes a mature theory for language teaching and learning. Nevertheless it remains the most prospective and promising area of research.Reference1. Langacker, Ronald W. 1987. Foundations of Cognitive Grammar Vol. 1: Theoretical Prerequisites. Stanford: Stanford University Press.2. Langacker, Ronald W. 1990. Concept, Image, and Symbol. The Cognitive Basis of Grammar. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.3. Randal Holme. 2011 Cognitive Linguistics and Language Teaching. Foreign Language Teaching and Research Press4. F.Ungerer&H.J.Schmid. 2008. An Introduction to Cognitive Linguistics. Foreign Language Teaching and Research Press5. George Lakoff.2007. Ten Lectures on Cognitive Linguistics by George Lakoff. Foreign Language Teaching and Research Press。