Details
Title | SUNY series in Chinese philosophy and culture. — The emergence of word-meaning in early China: normative models for words |
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Creators | Geaney Jane |
Collection | Электронные книги зарубежных издательств ; Общая коллекция |
Subjects | Chinese language — Semantics, Historical. ; Chinois (Langue) — Sémantique historique. ; EBSCO eBooks |
Document type | Other |
File type | |
Language | English |
Rights | Доступ по паролю из сети Интернет (чтение, печать, копирование) |
Record key | on1295617270 |
Record create date | 2/2/2022 |
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Group | Anonymous |
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Network | Internet |
"Posits the origin of a specifically Chinese concept of "word-meaning," and sheds new light on the linguistic ideas in early Chinese philosophical texts"--.
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- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: General Context
- Meaning, Sense, or Significance
- Dictionaries, Translation, and the Idea of Linguistic Abstractions
- Concepts of Word, Linguistic Media, and “Sociological Word”
- “Immersed” versus “Abstract” Views of Language
- Early Chinese Immersed Views of Language
- Method and Interpretive Theory
- Part One Key Metalinguistic Terms and Yi 義 as External
- Chapter 1 The Metalinguistic Implications of Words versus Names
- “Name” and “Word” in Modern Scholarship on Language
- “Word” and “Name” in Early Chinese Texts
- Early Chinese Texts and “Words” as Units
- Conclusion
- Chapter 2 Speech (Yan 言) from Within and Names (Ming 名) from Without
- Trajectories of Ming 名 and Speech
- The Physiological Trajectory of Speaking
- Speech as an Expression of the Heartmind’s Yi 意
- Counterargument: Ming 名 with Yi 意
- Conclusion
- Chapter 3 Yi 意 and the Heartmind’s Activities
- Reaching Internal Yi 意
- Perceptible Yi 意
- Yi 意, Si 思, and Lü 慮
- Yi 意 in the Absence of Knowing
- Yi 意 with Xiang 象
- Yi 意 versus Knowing
- Conclusion
- Chapter 4 The Externality of Yi 義
- The Pervasive Externality of Yi 義
- External Standards versus Internal Equalizing
- Conclusion
- Chapter 5 The Resilience of the Externality of Yi 義
- The Externality of Yi 義 in Self-Cultivation and Politics
- Constellations of Binaries
- Conclusion
- Chapter 1 The Metalinguistic Implications of Words versus Names
- Part Two Yi 義 as Model
- Chapter 6 Yi 義 as Model: Stable, Accessible Standards
- A Sampling of Perplexing Uses of Yi 義 as a Way into a Solution
- Yi 義 and Yi 儀 as Ordinary Material “Model”
- Yi 義 as Models: Heaven-Earth and Yin-Yang in Zhouyi Commentaries
- Yi 義 as Diagrammed in the Mawangdui Zhouyi Commentary “Mu He”
- Yi 義 “of” and “for” People in Yi Jing Literature
- Conclusion
- Chapter 7 Yi 義 as Model in Diagrams, Genres, Figurative Language, and Names
- Non-glottal Writing and Yi 義
- The Six Writing Models (Liu Yi 六義)
- Figurative Language
- Binary Assessments: Same, Different, and “One”
- The Yi 義 (Model) of Names in the Zuozhuan and the Lunheng
- Conclusion
- Chapter 8 A Framework Preceding the Shuowen’s Metalinguistic Choices
- Anachronism with Yiyi 意義
- Hidden Yi 意
- Hidden Yi 意 in the Lunheng’s “Chaoji” Chapter
- Accessible Yi 義 in the Lunheng
- Buddhist Influence?
- Yi 義 and Yi 意 in the Shuowen’s Myth about the Origin of Writing
- Conclusion
- Chapter 9 Yi 義 Justifying with Models
- Yin, Yang, and Yi 義 in the Baihu tong
- Model Sayings That Authorize
- Justifying in the Yijing
- Justifying in the Guliangzhuan
- Justifying in Other Texts
- Wuxing 五行 in the Baihu tong
- Conclusion
- Chapter 10 Yi 義 in the Shuowen Jiezi
- The Location of the Yi-Function in the Shuowen Jiezi
- Tong 同, Similarity
- Preceded by Zhi 之
- Yi-Function as Intentions (Yi 意)
- Yi-Function as Models (Yi 義)
- Deficient Yi-Function
- Conclusion
- Chapter 6 Yi 義 as Model: Stable, Accessible Standards
- Conclusion
- Appendix A Why Translate Yi 義 as “Model”?
- Standard Translation Equivalents for Metalinguistic Yi 義
- Advantages of Translating Yi 義 as “Model”
- Materiality of Yi 義
- Dyadic Yi 義 versus Triadic Signs
- Using Yi 義 for Illustration, Emulation, and Instruction
- Appendix B Yi 義’s Externality in Dispute: The Mengzi and the Mo Bian
- The Mengzi on Yi 義 as External
- The Mo Bian on Yi 義 as External
- Conclusion
- Appendix C Glossary of Terms with Aural or Visual Associations
- Bibliography
- Index