Name sometimes used for the detailed and careful analysis of ordinary language undertaken by linguistic philosophy.
Though not unconnected with ordinary phenomenology – especially in the work of English philosopher Gilbert Ryle (1900-1976) – it was an empirical rather than an a priori study, and did not involve ‘bracketing’ the world.
Source:
G Ryle, Collected Papers, 1 (1971)
Table of Contents
- 1 Videos
- 2 Related Products
- 2.1 Saussure's Philosophy of Language as Phenomenology: Undoing the Doctrine of the Course in General Linguistics
- 2.2 Saussure’s Linguistics, Structuralism, and Phenomenology: The Course in General Linguistics after a Century
- 2.3 Consciousness and the Acquisition of Language (Studies in Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy)
- 2.4 Unconsciousness Between Phenomenology and Psychoanalysis (Contributions to Phenomenology (88))
- 2.5 Signs (Studies in Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy)
- 2.6 Disclosing the World: On the Phenomenology of Language (The MIT Press)
- 2.7 The Spell of the Sensuous: Perception and Language in a More-Than-Human World
- 2.8 Aboutness (Carl G. Hempel Lecture Series)
- 2.9 Hermeneutics and Its Problems: With Selected Essays in Phenomenology (Contributions to Phenomenology (98))
- 2.10 The Intersection of Phenomenology and Semiotics: Peirce and Heidegger in Dialogue (Semiotics, Communication and Cognition)
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