ABSTRACT
In this volume, the author deals explicitly and literally with the speech-thought relationship. Departing boldly from contemporary linguistic and psycholinguistic thinking, the author offers us one of the truly serious efforts since Vygotsky to deal with this question. A unifying theme is the organization of action, and speech is seen as growing out of sensory-motor representations that are simultaneously part of meaning and part of action.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|35 pages
Introduction
part II|122 pages
Theory
part III|119 pages
Data
part IV|16 pages
Conclusion