This book is designed as a textbook and is intended to present a sample of the more popular approaches to linguistic theorizing.
It covers different aspects of each theory including general ontology, methodology, world view, and certain specifics including its problem-solving capacity regarding the English auxiliary complex. It gives a brief summary of the salient points of each theory and concludes with a brief treatment of concurrent developments in phonology. Included are discussions on
- tagmemics
- generative transformational grammar
- stratificational linguistics
- Montague grammar
- generalized phrase structure grammar
- lexical-functional grammar
- relational grammar, and
- functional approaches to grammar.
Table of Contents
Abbreviations and Symbols
Preface
Preface to the Third Edition
- Linguistic Theorizing
1.1 Of surveys and theories
1.2 Scientific progress and the logic of research
1.3 A brief history of the axiomatization of mathematics
1.4 Chomsky's definition of a grammar
1.5 Linguistics: A natural science, a social science, or a human science?
1.6 Verbal and nonverbal behavior, a unity?
1.7 Formal versus functional models
- The Aspects Model
2.1 Worldview
2.2 Ontological primitives
2.3 Methodology
2.4 The specific assumptions of the Aspects model
2.5 The problem-solving capacity of GTG
2.6 The AFFIX-HOPPING transformation
2.7 The D -SUPPORT transformation
2.8 Generative transformational theorizing
- Tagmemic
3.1 Introduction
3.2 General ontology, methodology, and worldview
3.3 The specific assumptions of the tagmemic model in Pike and Pike (1982)
3.4 The specific assumptions of the tagmemic model of Longacre (1983)
3.5 The problem-solving capacity of Tagmemics
3.6 New developments
3.7 Tagmemic theorizing
- Strl$