BazEkon - The Main Library of the Cracow University of Economics

BazEkon home page

Main menu

Author
Sztajer Sławomir (Uniwersytet im. Adama Mickiewicza w Poznaniu)
Title
Locke and Müller on Language, Thought and Religion
Locke i Miller w sprawie języka, myśli i religii
Source
Człowiek i Społeczeństwo / Uniwersytet im. Adama Mickiewicza w Poznaniu. Wydział Nauk Społecznych, 2012, t. 34, s. 249-259
Issue title
Nowe perspektywy filmoznawstwa
Keyword
Filozofia, Poglądy filozoficzne
Philosophy, Philosophical thought
Note
summ.
Locke John, Muller Fredrich Max
Abstract
This article is a contribution to research on the influence of John Locke's philosophy on Friedrich Max Müller's science of language, thought and religion. In the present study, influence is understood not merely as a more or less original continuation of Locke's philosophy, but also as an opposition to his achievements and criticism of his thought. While in the former case Locke's achievements form the basis for philosophical considerations, in the latter they constitute a negative point of reference which determines, to a considerable degree, debates on philosophical issues. The author of this article argues that many hypotheses elaborated by Müller, especially in the fields of the science of language and the science of religion, are based on Locke's philosophical achievements. Among the theories developed by Müller are the conception of mythology as a "disease" of language, the theory of metaphor as a linguistic phenomenon that allows language users to represent those domains of discourse which transcend sense experience, and a study concerning the relation between language and thought. (original abstract)
Accessibility
The Main Library of the Cracow University of Economics
The Library of University of Economics in Katowice
Bibliography
Show
  1. Aarsleff H., Locke's Influence, in Vere Chappell (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Locke, Cambridge 2006
  2. Cassirer E., Essay on Man: An Introduction to a Philosophy of Human Culture, Felix Meiner Verlag, Hamburg 2006
  3. Dowling L., Victorian Oxford and the Science of Language, PMLA 97.2 (Mar., 1982)
  4. Jäkel O., Hypotheses Revisited: The Cognitive Theory of Metaphor Applied to Religious Texts, Metaphoric.de, 2/2002
  5. Lafont C., The Linguistic Turn in Hermeneutic Philosophy, The MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass., and London 1999
  6. Language and Myth, Dover, New York 1953
  7. Locke J., Essay Concerning Human Understanding, 2.5.4, London 1825
  8. Losonsky F.M., Language, Meaning, and Mind in Locke's Essay, in: L. Newman (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Locke's "Essay Concerning Human Understanding", Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2010
  9. Müller F.M., Physical Religion, Longmans, Green, ad Co., London 1898
  10. Müller F.M., Comparative Philology, Edinburgh Review, Oct. 1851
  11. Müller F.M., Introduction to the Science of Religion, Longmans, Green, ad Co., London 1873
  12. Müller F.M., Lectures on the Science of Religion, Scribner and Co., New York 1872
  13. Müller F.M., Science of Thought, vol. 1, Charles Scribner's Sons, New York 1887
  14. Müller F.M., The Science of Language, vol. II, Longmans, Green, ad Co., London
  15. Müller F.M., Three Introductory Lectures to the Science of Thought, The Open Court Publishing Company, Chicago 1898
  16. Rorty R. (ed.), The Linguistic Turn: Recent Essays in Philosophical Method, The University of Chicago Press, Chicago and London 1967
Cited by
Show
ISSN
0239-3271
Language
eng
Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Google+ Share on Pinterest Share on LinkedIn Wyślij znajomemu