Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 97 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 39
Page 126
... actions . Conversations are ' open - ended ' . They are rarely scripted , and neither person knows at the start how the conversation will proceed or end . However joint actions still embody individual actions , but these are participatory ...
... actions . Conversations are ' open - ended ' . They are rarely scripted , and neither person knows at the start how the conversation will proceed or end . However joint actions still embody individual actions , but these are participatory ...
Page 127
... actions and speech from an example which Clark uses elsewhere : Speaker A gestures towards a chair and says to Speaker B ' sit down ' . Action and speech are represented in bold letters in the second version of the table . Table 2b ...
... actions and speech from an example which Clark uses elsewhere : Speaker A gestures towards a chair and says to Speaker B ' sit down ' . Action and speech are represented in bold letters in the second version of the table . Table 2b ...
Page 178
... actions , since actions have an intentional aspect , and there can be no intention without a person to do the intending . 30 Their behaviour would be the outcome of circumstances to which it would be pointless to attach credit or ...
... actions , since actions have an intentional aspect , and there can be no intention without a person to do the intending . 30 Their behaviour would be the outcome of circumstances to which it would be pointless to attach credit or ...
Contents
Lectures | 1 |
Life and Work in Shakespeares Poems | 15 |
The Poetry of the Caroline Court | 51 |
Copyright | |
19 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
actions African ancient Anthropology archaeology behaviour Beveridge curve Birley Britain British Academy British Museum Burrow Cambridge capacity century cognitive College criminal critics Crombie cultural dialogue dyad dyadic E. N. Goody early Ebla edition Edmund Leach Edwards England English society essay Essenes example excavations gumsa Hadrian's Wall hierarchy historians honour human important Indian individual Institute intellectual interaction interest John joint joint attention joking relationship Kachin labour labour-market later lecture linguistic literary Lloyd London meaning Meyer Fortes modern moral move Orgel Oxford paper patrilineal period person Piggott plagiarism plagiarist poems political printed Professor published question Qumran Radcliffe-Brown recognised Renaissance responsible role dyad Roman Britain rules Sanskrit scholars scrolls sense Shakespeare's Shakespeare's Sonnets social intelligence social structure Sonnets spoken language Stokes Stokes's Stuart texts things tion tradition unemployment University volume Winthrop's writing