Difference between revisions of "Semantic mirage"

From Glottopedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m
(added a category)
 
Line 14: Line 14:
 
[[Category:DICT]]
 
[[Category:DICT]]
 
[[Category:En]]
 
[[Category:En]]
[[Category:Grammar]]
+
[[Category:Grammar]][[Category:Stratificational_Grammar]]

Latest revision as of 06:09, 8 October 2017

A semantic mirage in neurocognitive linguistics is any semantic relationship between lexical and conceptual units in a cognitive system that leads to projections onto the world of properties that are not actually there.

Types

  • The One-Lexeme-One-Thing Fallacy. The assumption that a lexeme stands for just one thing, ruling out the possibility that it might have different senses in different contexts.
  • Reification. The assumption that a nominal lexeme must represent a thing, leading to the unconscious ascription of substantial reality to abstractions.
  • The Unity Fallacy. The assumption that a concept represents an object that is an integral whole, even if closer examination would show it to be a relatively haphazard collection of diverse phenomena.

Sources