Antonymy In Space And Other Strictly Ordered Domains
Author(s) -
Jessica Rett
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
the baltic international yearbook of cognition logic and communication
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1944-3676
DOI - 10.4148/1944-3676.1095
Subject(s) - asymmetry , space (punctuation) , computer science , natural (archaeology) , epistemology , psychology , linguistics , cognitive psychology , pure mathematics , social psychology , mathematics , physics , philosophy , biology , quantum mechanics , paleontology
Natural language references different types of entities. Some of these entities (e.g. degrees, locations, times) are strictly ordered with respect to one another; others (e.g. individuals, possible worlds) are not. The empirical goal of this paper is to show that some linguistically encoded relations across these domains (e.g. under, slower than) display a polar asymmetry, while others do not. The theoretical goal of this paper is to argue that this asymmetry – and its restriction to only certain relations – is due to intrinsic properties of strictly ordered domains, coupled with a bias in how language users perceive these domains
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