Abstract

This chapter highlights a dimension of embodiment that is often overlooked and that concerns the basic design architecture of human language itself: the ineludable fact that the fundamental relation on which language is based is the association between a mind-engendered meaning and a bodily-produced sign. It is argued that this oversight is often due to treating meaning on the level of the sentence or the construction, rather than of the lower-level linguistic items where the linguistic sign is stored in a stable, permanent, and direct relation with its meaning outside of any particular context. Building linguistic analysis up from the ground level provides it with a solid foundation and increases its explanatory power.

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