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Syllabus

Course Number 0659-2146-01
Course Name Whats Language? Answers from philosophy and linguistics
Academic Unit The Lester and Sally Entin Faculty of Humanities -
History & Philosophy of Science and Ideas
Lecturer Dr. Lin ChalozinContact
Contact Email: lin1chd@tauex.tau.ac.il
Office Hours By appointmentBuilding: Gilman - Humanities , Room: 365
Mode of Instruction Seminar
Credit Hours 4
Semester 2022/2
Day Thu
Hours 14:00-18:00
Building Gilman - Humanities
Room 458
Syllabus Not Found

Short Course Description

The question ?What is language?? underlies and has preoccupied the most diverse schools of philosophy and language sciences. From the viewpoint of philosophy, language provides a privileged vantage point from which to consider the medial space between thought and the world. Thus, it puts on display unique human phenomena such as the logos, reference, speech acts, or the various linguistic devices constructing and expressing power relations (such as interpellation). For linguistics, the major conundrum language presents lies in the discrepancy between language?s profound plurality and its apparent unity, i.e. the alleged existence of one cohesive linguistic mechanism enabling linguistic competence. In fact, whereas language most often appears to us as multiplicity and difference?the multitude and variety of languages, words, sounds, syntactic systems or morphological regularities?both our intuition and sheer biological evidence allow us to treat it as a unitary object: Language with a ?capital L.? In everyday life, however, we encounter more often the ?language? through which we communicate (le langage) than the theoretical abstraction ?Language? (la langue) with its grammatical rules and its universal dimensions. Thus the relationship between these different manifestations of language?in form of langage or langue?is a source of constant tension between philosophy, theoretical linguistics and the social sciences interested in language (such as communication sciences, critical discourse analysis, or the various branches of applied linguistics and education sciences). The more we delve into the different traditions of knowledge studying linguistic phenomena and their nature, the more convoluted and stimulating grows the question ?What is language??.

This seminar will introduce participants to texts by philosophers, grammarians and linguists (mostly from the nineteenth, twentieth and twenty first centuries). We will focus on some of the classic issues that have attracted linguists, philosophers and sociolinguists and extract their various answers to the question ?What is language??.



Full syllabus is to be published
Course Requirements

Seminar Paper

Students may be required to submit additional assignments
Full requirements as stated in full syllabus

The specific prerequisites of the course,
according to the study program, appears on the program page of the handbook



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