Miller, James (forthcoming). Words and Other Linguistic Entities. Oxford University Press.
Abstract:
Linguistic entities play a major part in almost all elements of our
lives. Despite this, relatively little work exists in philosophy that
considers what such entities are. In the work that does focus
specifically on the metaphysics of words, the dominant view is
type-realism, which posits that words are abstract types, instantiated
by concrete tokens. This book argues, however, that type-realism faces a
range of problems and that positing abstract types cannot help us to
explain a range of ordinary everyday linguistic phenomena. In its place,
this book argues in favour of a novel version of nominalism about
words, holding that ordinary claims about words are in fact claims about
collections of word-tokens only. Through combining nominalism with a
trope-bundle metaphysics, this book proposes a 'bundle-nominalist'
metaphysics of words, in which word-tokens are analysed as bundles of
particular properties, which cluster in repeatable and predictable ways
due to the acting of various homeostatic mechanisms. This view is then
extended to other linguistic entities, such as morphemes, phonemes,
sentences, and languages. The result is a unified metaphysics of
linguistic entities, which is argued to be both consistent with
linguistic theorising and highly explanatory. Words and Other Linguistic
Entities outlines how this 'bundle-nominalist' metaphysics can provide
new insights into a range of linguistic phenomena, including linguistic
mistakes, linguistic change, and the nature of offensive language, and
can help illuminate ongoing debates over the subject matter of
linguistics and the evolution of language.
I gasped when I read this. Bundle theory mentioned!
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