Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Figures
- Typographical conventions
- Preface
- 1 Introduction: some basic terms and concepts
- 2 Communication and information
- 3 Language as a semiotic system
- 4 Semiotics
- 5 Behaviourist semantics
- 6 Logical semantics
- 7 Reference, sense and denotation
- 8 Structural semantics I: semantic fields
- 9 Structural semantics II: sense relations
- Bibliography
- Index
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Figures
- Typographical conventions
- Preface
- 1 Introduction: some basic terms and concepts
- 2 Communication and information
- 3 Language as a semiotic system
- 4 Semiotics
- 5 Behaviourist semantics
- 6 Logical semantics
- 7 Reference, sense and denotation
- 8 Structural semantics I: semantic fields
- 9 Structural semantics II: sense relations
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
When I began writing this book six years ago, it was my intention to produce a fairly short one-volume introduction to semantics which might serve the needs of students in several disciplines and might be of interest to the general reader. The work that I have in fact produced is far longer, though in certain respects it is less comprehensive, than I originally anticipated; and for that reason it is being published in two volumes.
Volume 1 is, for the most part, more general than volume 2; and it is relatively self-contained. In the first seven chapters, I have done my best, within the limitations of the space available, to set semantics within the more general framework of semiotics (here defined as the investigation of both human and non-human signalling-systems); and I have tried to extract from what ethologists, psychologists, philosophers, anthropologists and linguists have had to say about meaning and communication something that amounts to a consistent, if rather eclectic, approach to semantics. One of the biggest problems that I have had in writing this section of the book has been terminological. It is frequently the case in the literature of semantics and semiotics that the same terms are employed in quite different senses by different authors or that there are several alternatives for what is essentially the same phenomenon. All I can say is that I have been as careful as possible in selecting between alternative terms or alternative interpretations of the same terms and, within the limits of my own knowledge of the field, in drawing the reader's attention to certain terminological pitfalls.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Semantics , pp. xi - xivPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1977