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020 _a 978-0-511-50685-7
040 _aDLC
_bEn
_cDLC
050 _aDUCE P37.5.C37 C48
100 _aChomsky, Noam
_qNoam Chomsky
245 _aCartesian linguistics:
_ba chapter in the history of rationalist thought /
_cNoam Chomsky
250 _a3rd ed.
260 _aCambridge:
_bCambridge University Press,
_c2009.
300 _av, 158 p. ;
_bill.:
_c 24 cm.
_eBook
500 _aIncludes Bibliography and Index.
520 _aCartesian Linguistics (CL) began as a manuscript written while Noam Chomsky was a 35-year-old fellow of the American Council of Learned Societies. An early version of it was prepared for presentation as a Christian Gauss lecture on Criticism at Princeton University early in 1964. Perhaps because it proved beyond the audience, it was not delivered, and Chomsky presented a general lecture on linguistics as understood at the time. The manu script, however, was revised and published in 1966. An intellectual tour de force, CL is not an easy text to read, but it is certainly a rewarding one. It is an unprecedented and– so far– unequalled linguistic–philosophical study of linguistic creativity and the nature of the mind that is able to produce it.
_uhttp://172.20.27.22:4000/handle/123456789/28
650 _2Lingustics
_aCartesian Lingustics
700 _a James McGilvray
_eEditor
_qNoam Chomsky
856 _yhttp://172.20.27.22:4000/handle/123456789/28
_uhttp://172.20.27.22:4000/handle/123456789/28
942 _2lcc
_cBK
_n1
999 _c4305
_d4305