RUSSIAN LINGUISTIC BULLETIN 1 (17) 2019
42
A conceptualist sees
conceptualization as a living process that consists in generation of new meanings in the substantial
forms of the concept. For a cognitive
scientist, however, it is something that results from generalization of things within the
mental frame, while the conceptual metaphor is no more than an
analogy used in comparing objects with similar meanings. A
conceptualist uses the “descending” principle (from the concept to the image), while a cognitivist prefers the “ascending” path
(from the image to the concept).
The “descending - ascending” paths should be clarified in more detail.
The Nonpossessor Nilus of Sora, when outlining his concept of cognition at the very end of the 15
th
century, in the spirit of
medieval symbolic thinking, expressed an idea that in the 20
th
century and at a higher conceptual level was voiced by cognitive
science: the key concepts of cognitive linguistics are essentially
conceptualization and
categorization. Nilus, a simple soul,
express this idea the Russian way, with an emphasis on ethics: “descending is better than ascending.” One would wonder what
connection can be found between these two statements divided by half a millennium. Actually,
they have a lot, if not
everything, in common – but in terms of the mental aspect and not only in the verbal form of expression.
The two positions essentially coincide. What I mean here is the
ascent towards the notion (categorization, in terms of
contemporary linguistics), shaping the conceptual hyperonyms of modern literary languages, and the
descent from the abstract
notion to the
image (penetrating into
the symbol of the conceptum; finding the “grain of primary sense”, i.e.
conceptualization), preserving the metaphoric system of “natural speech”. This opposition, dating back to ancient times when
the simplest equipollent oppositions were still widely used, is highly significant. This is not just a logical
opposition but a
representation of the
antinomy of knowledge, which in its dialectical connection will probably never be resolved.
Contrasting of the two approaches has now achieved the level of an opposition. At the level of the communicative act, this
is the opposition between the speaker and the listener, at the logical level – the opposition between denotation and sense, at the
ethical level – the opposition between consciousness and conscience, which once (in the times of Nilus) were seen as
something whole, as one and the same, etc.;
ultimately, the opposition between the essence and the phenomenon – the
opposition so significant for a realist. Hence another important difference between the designated cognitive approaches:
contensive linguistics is
typological in character, while cognitive linguistics is
comparative (it is within cognitive science that
concepts from different languages are studied in comparison); conceptology is
historical in its essence: it does not compare
different languages in space but studies its native language in time.
In general, the correlation between all the described approaches in the history of Russian linguistics can be represented in
the following way.
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