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The Fall of the Word and the Rise of the Mental Model

A Reinterpretation of the Recent Research on Spatial Cognition and Language

by Frode J. Stromnes (Author)
©2006 Monographs 532 Pages

Summary

The use of mental imagery and mental models can make a substantial difference to language and thinking, which improve by using them. This happens because knowledge can only be stored in homeomorphic, spatial structures. Words are addresses that the brain uses to locate the simulacra it has stored. Accordingly, the traditional view of knowledge is untenable: knowledge is not stored in language-like propositions. The philosophical and mathematical arguments claiming propositions exist, are erroneous. Language is learned naturally when words, sentences and the structure of the situation are experienced simultaneously. Grammars are geometrical systems that cannot be expressed in words. Their diverse geometries result in different experiential and behavioural consequences for different languages.

Details

Pages
532
Year
2006
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631521779
Language
English
Keywords
Raumwahrnehmung Wissensrepräsentation Spracherwerb Language Learning Number Theory Theory of Knowledge Symbol System Theory Spatial Cognition
Published
Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2006. 532 pp., num. fig., tables and graphs

Biographical notes

Frode J. Stromnes (Author)

The Author: Frode J. Strømnes is professor of cognitive psychology at the University of Bergen. He has done research on word learning and on the spatial structures of Finnish and Swedish.

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Title: The Fall of the Word and the Rise of the Mental Model