ABSTRACT

Landmarks in Linguistic Thought Vol 3 is devoted to a linguistic tradition that lies outside the Western mainstream, namely that of the Middle East.
The reader is introduced to the major issues and themes that have determined the development of the Arabic linguistic tradition. Each chapter contains a short extract from a translated `landmark' text followed by a commentary which places the text in its social and intellectual context. The chosen texts frequently offer scope for comparison with the Western tradition. By contrasting the two systems, the Western and the Middle Eastern, this book serves to highlight the characteristics of two very different systems and thus stimulate new ideas about the history of linguistics.
This book presumes no prior knowledge of Arabo-Islamic culture and Arabic language, and is invaluable to anyone with an interest in the History of Linguistics. Kees Versteegh is currently Professor of Arabic and Islam at the Middle East Institute of the University of Nijmegen, The Netherlands. His publications include The Explanation of Linguistic Causes (1995),Ed. Arabic Outside the Arab World (1994)

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

chapter |12 pages

Linguistics and exegesis

Muqâtil on the explanation of the Qur'ân

chapter |12 pages

The development of linguistic theory

Az-Zajjâjî on linguistic explanation

chapter |12 pages

The relationship between speech and thought

Al-Fârâbî on language

chapter |14 pages

The origin of speech

Ibn Jinnî and the two alternatives

chapter |12 pages

A new semantic approach to linguistics

Al-Jurjânî and as-Sakkâkî on meaning

chapter |13 pages

The conventional character of language

The science of the “institution of speech”

chapter |13 pages

The Arabic model and other languages

The description of Turkic and Hebrew