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  1. Dark matter of the mind: the culturally articulated unconscious.Daniel Leonard Everett - 2016 - Chicago: London ; The University of Chicago Press.
    This book is an exploration of interrelationships among culture, language, and the individual unconscious (the "dark matter of the mind”), how these feed into a sense of self, and implications for the notion of "human nature.” The first part of the book is concerned with perceptual and cultural bases of dark matter and the effect of dark matter on perception (especially vision) and the interpretation of discourse. The second part is concerned with the contribution of dark matter to language--with language (...)
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  • An essay on man: an introduction to a philosophy of human culture.Ernst Cassirer - 1944 - New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
    An 'Essay on man' is an original synthesis of contemporary knowledge, a unique interpretation of the intellectual crisis of our time, and a brilliant vindication of manís ability to resolve human problems by the courageous use of his mind.
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  • The philosophy of symbolic forms.Ernst Cassirer - 1953 - New Haven,: Yale University Press.
    v. 1. Language.--v. 2. Mythical thought.--v. 3. The phenomenology of knowledge.--v. 4. The metaphysics of symbolic forms.
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  • The Language Animal: The Full Shape of the Human Linguistic Capacity.Charles Taylor - 2016 - Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press.
    From Sources of the Self to A Secular Age, Charles Taylor has shown how we create ways of being, as individuals and as a society. Here, he demonstrates that language is at the center of this generative process. Language does not merely describe; it constitutes meaning, and the shared practice of speech shapes human experience.
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  • The Philosophy of Symbolic Forms: Volume 1: Language.Ernst Cassirer - 1955 - New York, NY: Yale University Press.
    The _Symbolic Forms_ has long been considered the greatest of Cassirer’s works. Into it he poured all the resources of his vast learning about language and myth, religion, art, and science—the various creative symbolizing activities and constructions through which man has expressed himself and given intelligible objective form to this experience. “These three volumes alone make an outstanding contribution to epistemology and to the human power of abstraction. It is rather as if ‘The Golden Bough’ had been written in philosophical (...)
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  • The Philosophy of Symbolic Forms: Vol. 1. Language.P. L. Heath, Ernst Cassirer, Ralph Manheim & C. W. Hendel - 1955 - Philosophical Quarterly 5 (19):184.
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  • An Essay on Man. An Introduction to a Philosophy of Human Culture. [REVIEW]Helmut Kuhn - 1945 - Journal of Philosophy 42 (18):497-504.
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  • An Essay on Man: An Introduction to a Philosophy of Human Culture.Fritz Kaufmann - 1947 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 8 (2):283-287.
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  • Cultural constraints on grammar and cognition in pirahã: Another look at the D e sign features} of human L anguage.Daniel L. Everett - 2005 - Current Anthropology 46 (4):621--646.
    The Pirahã language challenges simplistic application of Hockett’s nearly universally accepted design features of human language by showing that some of these features may be culturally constrained. In particular, Pirahã culture constrains communication to nonabstract subjects which fall within the immediate experience of interlocutors. This constraint explains a number of very surprising features of Pirahã grammar and culture: the absence of numbers of any kind or a concept of counting and of any terms for quantification, the absence of color terms, (...)
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