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Language Norms : What and where are they?

Ask Zaar, Balder Edmund LU orcid (2022) In The Public Journal of Semiotics 10(1). p.26-39
Abstract
The notion of a language norm is far from clear. Lacking a conclusive explication, one may wonder what language studies are actually studying. Is it the experience of speakers? Is it their brains? Is it their behavior? Is it the product of expert intuitions? Even within linguistics the views seem scattered on this point, and no consensus has been reached on what the object of study in linguistics is supposed to be. The ontology of language norms is thus of high relevance, not only philosophically, but for the empirical implications of any potential ontological claim. In a question: what are we studying when we are studying language norms? This paper is thus an effort to, primarily with the help of Husserlian phenomenology, discuss language... (More)
The notion of a language norm is far from clear. Lacking a conclusive explication, one may wonder what language studies are actually studying. Is it the experience of speakers? Is it their brains? Is it their behavior? Is it the product of expert intuitions? Even within linguistics the views seem scattered on this point, and no consensus has been reached on what the object of study in linguistics is supposed to be. The ontology of language norms is thus of high relevance, not only philosophically, but for the empirical implications of any potential ontological claim. In a question: what are we studying when we are studying language norms? This paper is thus an effort to, primarily with the help of Husserlian phenomenology, discuss language norms and their location in order to answer this question as well as to obviate or at least mitigate some of the concerning trends found in recent discussions on language norms. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
phenomenology, language norms, ontology of language, Husserl and language, location of language norms
in
The Public Journal of Semiotics
volume
10
issue
1
pages
14 pages
publisher
Open Semiotics Resource Center
external identifiers
  • scopus:85144753418
ISSN
1918-9907
DOI
10.37693/pjos.2022.10.24476
language
English
LU publication?
no
id
702ba289-adca-4b94-90c7-747a712b4ba9
date added to LUP
2024-09-17 15:48:53
date last changed
2024-09-26 09:49:30
@article{702ba289-adca-4b94-90c7-747a712b4ba9,
  abstract     = {{The notion of a language norm is far from clear. Lacking a conclusive explication, one may wonder what language studies are actually studying. Is it the experience of speakers? Is it their brains? Is it their behavior? Is it the product of expert intuitions? Even within linguistics the views seem scattered on this point, and no consensus has been reached on what the object of study in linguistics is supposed to be. The ontology of language norms is thus of high relevance, not only philosophically, but for the empirical implications of any potential ontological claim. In a question: what are we studying when we are studying language norms? This paper is thus an effort to, primarily with the help of Husserlian phenomenology, discuss language norms and their location in order to answer this question as well as to obviate or at least mitigate some of the concerning trends found in recent discussions on language norms.}},
  author       = {{Ask Zaar, Balder Edmund}},
  issn         = {{1918-9907}},
  keywords     = {{phenomenology; language norms; ontology of language; Husserl and language; location of language norms}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{1}},
  pages        = {{26--39}},
  publisher    = {{Open Semiotics Resource Center}},
  series       = {{The Public Journal of Semiotics}},
  title        = {{Language Norms : What and where are they?}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.37693/pjos.2022.10.24476}},
  doi          = {{10.37693/pjos.2022.10.24476}},
  volume       = {{10}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}