MEANING AND LANGUAGE USE
1.
Bloomfield and Behaviorism
The main function of language is as the
instrument of communication. Because of that function, many people look to the
process of communication for an explanation of meaning in natural languages.
In recent time (1940), two linguists
suggested the specification of meaning in the certain situation in which the
sentences are uttered. In England, that kind of suggestion is made by Firth,
while in America it was made by Bloomfield. But Bloomfield’s account is more
considered because it is more detailed and articulated theoretical framework.
In evaluating Bloomfield’s, it is important
to create the attitude of scientific theory then prevalent (non-scientific) in
our mind. In addition, it is also believed that as a scientist, the most
important job is to collect some facts without having any theory before and to
expect that the facts collected and sifted carefully would in course of time
lead to the correct theory. In science, the most focus thing is objectivity
because the emphasis is on collecting the data. So, there is no subjective
thing, such as opinion, intuition or others, can influence it. The consequences
for abstract theoretical constructs are only tolerated as scientific, if they
could be defined in terms of observable events.
Here,
Bloomfield suggested to analyze the meaning of linguistic into two
terms :
1.1 The important
elements of the situation in which the speaker utters it
Bloomfield
analyze the situation into three constituent parts:
a.
Speaker’s stimulus
b.
Utterence (speaker’s respopnse and hearer’s stimulus)
c.
Hearer’s response
The practical event A consists no ideas but of the actual concrete
elements of the situation. Jill, who seeing an apple felt hungry (=A),
stimulated her to respond with an utterence (=B), which in turn acted as a
stimulus to the hearer, Jack, whose response is (=C).
The explanation; an apple is an object that
seen by Jill as a speaker, then she responds her stimulation by utterance that
would be “I am hungry”, the hearer will responds it by taking an apple
for Jill because what the hearer understood is that Jill wants that apple. What
the speaker wants may be said as “I am hungry, please get me that apple”.
This meaning is implicit.
1.2 The distinctive
meaning
Bloomfield suggested characterizing the
word meaning in terms of the distinctive features of the situation, the meaning
of the word being features common to all situations in which the word is
uttered. For a given word can be uttered without the object question being
present. Examples; “Bring me shirt” could be uttered with no shirt in
speech situation: contemporary the speaker might have only a pair of pants on
and the stimulus which cause him to utter is not the sight of the shirt, but
the cold which causes his skin too goose-pimple.
2.
Speech acts semantics
Locutionary act, Illocutionary act, and Perlocutionary
act
Not at all theories of meaning in terns of the process of
communication are subject to this form of critism. In particular, speech acts
semantics is not open to such as a charege of reductionism, since it purports
to characterise the nature of language not in terms of the observable elements of the situation but in terms of
an abstract concept of speech act.
Austin suggested in uttering a sentence a
speaker is generally involved in three different acts. Three-fold distinction
that can then be referred to in the following way :
a. A speaker utters sentences with a
particular meaning (locutionary)
b. A particular force (illocutionary)
c. To achieve a certain effect on the hearer
(perlocutionary)
Locutionary act is the act of
uttering a sentence with a certain meaning. In addition a speaker may have
intended his utterance to constitute an act of praise, criticism, agreement,
etc. It is called as a particular force (Illocutionary act). Finally he
may have uttered the sentence he did utter to achieve a certain consequent
response from his hearer-for example to frighten or to get him to do something
(perlocutionary act).
Suppose for example my child is refusing to
lie down and go to sleep and I say to him “I will turn your light off”. Now the
locutionary act is the utterance of the sentence”I will turn your light
off”. But I may be intending the
utterance to be interpreted as a threat, and this is my illocutionary act.
Quite separate from either of these is the consequent behavior by my child that
I intend to follow from my utterance, namely that he frightened into silence
and sleep. The perlocutionary act is the consequent effect on the hearer
which the speaker intends should follow from his utterance.
Speaker-presupposition and Assertion
Part and parcel of this recent speech act
approach to meaning by linguistics is the use of the term
speaker-presupposition. This term is said to contrast with assertion, and
meaning of a sentence is said to be divided between the part that the speaker
asserts and the part that he presupposes, or assumes, to be true.
Thus we might for example say that an
imperative form is appropriate if (a) the hearer is believed to be able to
carry out the action that is proposed, (b) it is no obvious that he would do so
in the normal course of events, and (c) the speaker wants the hearer to carry
out this action.
This distinction has been used for example to explain
the difference between sentence pairs such as
1. Bill is addicted to morphine
2. It is morphine that Bill is addicted to
3. Bill is addicted to morphine
4. What bill is addicted to is morphine
5. My sister is at the party and my brother’s
in bed with flu
6. My sister is at the party but my brother’s
in bed with flu
In the first two pairs of cases, it is said
that in second sentence the speaker is presupposing that Bill is addicted to
something and asserting that something is morphine; in the final pair the
speaker said by using but, the specific contrast in this case being
carried by the presuppose that there is some element of contrast between two
sentences joined by but, the specific contrast in this case being
carried by the presupposition that my brother is not at the party (this
standing in the requisite contrast to my sister is at the party).
1 komentar:
very good article, thanks
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