Saussure as a linguist and Wittgenstein as a philosopher of language are arguably the two most important figures in the development of twentieth-century linguistic thought. By pointing out what their ideas have in common, in spite of emanating from very different intellectual sources, this study bre[...]
In Signs of Writing Roy Harris re-examines basic questions about writing that have long been obscured by the traditional assumption that writing is merely a visual substitute for speech. By treating writing as an independent mode of communication, based on the use of spatial relations to connect eve[...]
Integrating Reality discusses the ontological assumptions behind integrational linguistics. They start from the assumption that 'What is reality?' is a question that only human beings are capable of asking. Being able to ask it already presupposes a mastery of language, and in turn tacitly assumes r[...]