Bases for a Morphological Continuum of Spanish
Conceptual subtlety in science demands clarity. The significance of universality rests on the fact that concepts do not overlap with each other. Nonetheless, clarity is a target &, as such, it should not be confused with the method by which we try to attain it. The binary method (0/1, yes/no) is...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Estudios de lingüística 2003-01, Vol.17, p.57-79 |
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description | Conceptual subtlety in science demands clarity. The significance of universality rests on the fact that concepts do not overlap with each other. Nonetheless, clarity is a target &, as such, it should not be confused with the method by which we try to attain it. The binary method (0/1, yes/no) is "a" method, but not "the" method. It would be fruitful to apply a "fuzzy" method in addition to - or even instead of - the binary method. Every explanation tries to approach reality, & it is obvious that reality sometimes does not display clear-cut boundaries. I would rather claim that many facts of reality show fuzzy, continuous profiles. In such cases, would it not be legitimate to approach fuzzy facts from a continuous - not discrete - perspective? In the present paper, I shall present some underpinnings of a continuous perspective in linguistics & the main morphological issues for which such a perspective is particularly suitable. In the literature on morphology, we often encounter hesitating, sometimes even contradictory explanations that fluctuate between different categorizations of certain linguistic units. Doubt of thought is an indication that what "the thing meant" is not discontinuous with nature. Many categories, subcategories, etc, are not perfectly separated from one another, but they lie at different positions of a continuous scale. 3 Tables, 66 References. Adapted from the source document |
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In the literature on morphology, we often encounter hesitating, sometimes even contradictory explanations that fluctuate between different categorizations of certain linguistic units. Doubt of thought is an indication that what "the thing meant" is not discontinuous with nature. Many categories, subcategories, etc, are not perfectly separated from one another, but they lie at different positions of a continuous scale. 3 Tables, 66 References. 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The significance of universality rests on the fact that concepts do not overlap with each other. Nonetheless, clarity is a target &, as such, it should not be confused with the method by which we try to attain it. The binary method (0/1, yes/no) is "a" method, but not "the" method. It would be fruitful to apply a "fuzzy" method in addition to - or even instead of - the binary method. Every explanation tries to approach reality, & it is obvious that reality sometimes does not display clear-cut boundaries. I would rather claim that many facts of reality show fuzzy, continuous profiles. In such cases, would it not be legitimate to approach fuzzy facts from a continuous - not discrete - perspective? In the present paper, I shall present some underpinnings of a continuous perspective in linguistics & the main morphological issues for which such a perspective is particularly suitable. In the literature on morphology, we often encounter hesitating, sometimes even contradictory explanations that fluctuate between different categorizations of certain linguistic units. Doubt of thought is an indication that what "the thing meant" is not discontinuous with nature. Many categories, subcategories, etc, are not perfectly separated from one another, but they lie at different positions of a continuous scale. 3 Tables, 66 References. Adapted from the source document</abstract></addata></record> |
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title | Bases for a Morphological Continuum of Spanish |
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