Imposition of Words in Stoicism and Late Ancient Grammar and Philosophy

Ancient thinkers agreed that words have received their meanings by an institution, a θέσις, but they disagreed about the extent to which the choice of sounds to represent a given thing was at the discretion of the person instituting the name. The Stoics clearly thought that generally ‟name-setters”...

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Main Author: Sten Ebbesen
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Université de Lille 2019-02-01
Series:Methodos
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/methodos/5641
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spelling doaj-1b8a034d499a48958e07f349ac800ce52020-11-24T20:44:59ZfraUniversité de LilleMethodos1769-73792019-02-011910.4000/methodos.5641Imposition of Words in Stoicism and Late Ancient Grammar and PhilosophySten EbbesenAncient thinkers agreed that words have received their meanings by an institution, a θέσις, but they disagreed about the extent to which the choice of sounds to represent a given thing was at the discretion of the person instituting the name. The Stoics clearly thought that generally ‟name-setters” had aimed at creating words that were somehow suggestive of the things signified, but the article argues that they did not assume an initial stage in which all the words of a given language were ideally suited to their function, aberrations (‟anomaly”) in contemporary usage being due to a process of decay. Rather, they assumed that word-creation is a continuous process, driven by the needs or ordinary people, and only co-ordinated to some extent by their common rationality, this being the reason for the insufficient systematicity they discovered in the standard Greek of their day and tried to remedy by means of a rigorously systematic nomenclature of their own.http://journals.openedition.org/methodos/5641Stoicslanguagenamesetymologyanomalynature
collection DOAJ
language fra
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sten Ebbesen
spellingShingle Sten Ebbesen
Imposition of Words in Stoicism and Late Ancient Grammar and Philosophy
Methodos
Stoics
language
names
etymology
anomaly
nature
author_facet Sten Ebbesen
author_sort Sten Ebbesen
title Imposition of Words in Stoicism and Late Ancient Grammar and Philosophy
title_short Imposition of Words in Stoicism and Late Ancient Grammar and Philosophy
title_full Imposition of Words in Stoicism and Late Ancient Grammar and Philosophy
title_fullStr Imposition of Words in Stoicism and Late Ancient Grammar and Philosophy
title_full_unstemmed Imposition of Words in Stoicism and Late Ancient Grammar and Philosophy
title_sort imposition of words in stoicism and late ancient grammar and philosophy
publisher Université de Lille
series Methodos
issn 1769-7379
publishDate 2019-02-01
description Ancient thinkers agreed that words have received their meanings by an institution, a θέσις, but they disagreed about the extent to which the choice of sounds to represent a given thing was at the discretion of the person instituting the name. The Stoics clearly thought that generally ‟name-setters” had aimed at creating words that were somehow suggestive of the things signified, but the article argues that they did not assume an initial stage in which all the words of a given language were ideally suited to their function, aberrations (‟anomaly”) in contemporary usage being due to a process of decay. Rather, they assumed that word-creation is a continuous process, driven by the needs or ordinary people, and only co-ordinated to some extent by their common rationality, this being the reason for the insufficient systematicity they discovered in the standard Greek of their day and tried to remedy by means of a rigorously systematic nomenclature of their own.
topic Stoics
language
names
etymology
anomaly
nature
url http://journals.openedition.org/methodos/5641
work_keys_str_mv AT stenebbesen impositionofwordsinstoicismandlateancientgrammarandphilosophy
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