The Form of Information in Science: Analysis of an Immunology Sublanguage (Boston Studies in the Philosophy and History of Science, #104)

by Z. Harris, Michael Gottfried, Thomas Ryckman, Anne Daladier, and Paul Mattick

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Book cover for The Form of Information in Science

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DOES DISCOURSE HAVE A 'STRUCTURE'? HARRIS'S REVOLUTION IN LINGUISTICS As a freshman back in 1947 I discovered that within the various academic divisions and subdivisions of the University of Pennsylvania there existed a something (it was not a Department, but a piece of the Anthropology Department) called 'Linguistic Analysis'. I was an untalented but enthusiastic student of Greek and a slightly more talented student of German, as well as the son of a translator, so the idea of 'Linguistic Analysis' attracted me, sight unseen, and I signed up for a course. It turned out that 'Linguistic Analysis' was essentially a graduate program - I and another undergraduate called Noam Chomsky were the only two undergraduates who took courses in Linguistic Analysis - and also that it was essentially a one-man show: a professor named Zellig Harris taught all the courses with the aid of graduate Teaching Fellows (and possibly - I am not sure - one Assistant Professor). The technicalities of Linguistic Analysis were formidable, and I never did master them all. But the powerful intellect and personality of Zellig Harris drew me like a lodestone, and, although I majored in Philosophy, I took every course there was to take in Linguistic Analysis from then until my gradua tion. What 'Linguistics' was like before Zellig Harris is something not many people care to remember today.
  • ISBN13 9789401077774
  • Publish Date 3 November 2011
  • Publish Status Active
  • Publish Country NL
  • Imprint Springer
  • Edition Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1989
  • Format Paperback
  • Pages 589
  • Language English