TODAY 5:45pm "The Linguistics of Existence"
We hope to see you at today's talk: *The Linguistics of Existence* *Peter Klapes, M.A. candidate in Philosophy (Boston College)* *TODAY [Monday, April 8] at 5:45pm, CAS 225* https://www.facebook.com/events/2203739999714132/ Not only is the talk exciting and interdisciplinary, it also showcases student effort! *Abstract: *It is said that the nature of the linguistic sign is arbitrary. Since antiquity, the question of whether words are linked to their referent by nature or merely by convention has persisted. In Plato’s *Cratylus*, Socrates realizes that names are often imperfect in the naming of any object. Later, sparking somewhat of a linguistic crisis, Friedrich Nietzsche questioned the nature of truth and Ferdinand de Saussure demonstrated that *signifiers* and *signifieds* share no inherent link. This concept of linguistic arbitrariness will, in this talk, be connected to philosophical, existential, and anthropological questions and themes—including freedom, poetics, politics, and the nature of the imagination.
participants (1)
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Linguistics Association