Cognition and Figurative Language

Front Cover
Richard P. Honeck, Robert R. Hoffman
Routledge, Oct 31, 2018 - Language Arts & Disciplines - 450 pages

Originally published in 1980, this is a book about the psychology of figurative language. It is however, eclectic and therefore should be of interest to professionals and students in education, linguistics, philosophy, sociolinguistics, and other concerned with meaning and cognition. The editors felt there was a pressing need to bring together the growing empirical efforts of this topic. In a sense, recognition of the theoretical importance of figurative language symbolized the transition from the psycholinguistics of the 1960s to that of the late 1970s, that is from a linguistic semantics to a more comprehensive psychological semantics with a healthy respect for context, inference, world knowledge, and above all creative imagination. The organization of the volume reflects the more basic, general concerns with cognition – from historical and philosophical background, through problems of mental representation and semantic theory, to developmental trends, and to applications in problem solving.

 

Contents

Preface
Historical Notes on Figurative Language
A Philosophical Perspective on the Problems
Some Psycholinguistic Aspects of Metaphor
A Realist View
Proverbs Meaning and Group Structure
Rating Reporting
Mental Imagery and the Comprehension of Figurative
Some Concluding Remarks
Toward a Perceptual Theory of Metaphoric
The Issue
The Developmental Structure of Figurative
The Ontogenesis of Metaphor
PROBLEM SOLVING
Metaphor in Science
Author Index

The Cognitive Dynamics of Synesthesia and Metaphor
Semantic

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Richard P. Honeck, Robert R. Hoffman