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FOR 600:  Functional Concepts and Frames

Subject Area Humanities
Term from 2005 to 2013
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 13165901
 
The Research Unit investigates so-called functional concepts and their relation to a very general mode of description, the frames of cognitive psychology (Lawrence Barsalou). Functional concepts (FCs) describe their objects as something that, for a given object of reference, exists only once: its length , its meaning , its mother , its head. In defining its object as belonging to something else, they are relational, in applying to only one object, they are inherently unambiguous. These properties of the concept type are reflected in grammar: being relational, FC nouns often occur in possessive constructions and due to their inherent unambiguity, they are mostly used in definite NPs. FCs can be used for a precise partial description of the object of reference that singles out, and names, a particular aspect of it (e.g. its length, meaning etc.). They constitute a relatively young achievement of language that probably emerged under the influence of scientific development. The linguistic projects explore the criteria for recognising this type of concept and investigate its grammatical and semantic properties both synchronically, typologically and historically.
Barsalou considers frames a universal format of description; according to him all our cognitive concepts are frames. A frame describes an object through a set of attributes such as size , function , shape etc. For these attributes a more or less precise value is specified. The choice of a set of attributes and the assignment of values to them yields a description, of similar structure as, say, the description of a person in a passport. According to Barsalou, all cognitive categories and individual objects we know are represented in our minds by such frames.
The attributes in Barsalou frames are functional concepts. Seen in this way, any mental description is a description in terms of an appropriate set of functional concepts (where we are not, however, entitled to assume that our languages provide terms for all these FCs). Therefore, those FCs that (already) are lexicalised lay open components of the mental descriptions we use.
The philosophical projects investigate the formal properties of Barsalou frames, their neurological foundation, the role of frames in the development of science and the history of the theory of concepts in metaphysics.
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