John Wiley & Sons The Search for the Perfect Language Cover The idea that there once existed a language which perfectly and unambiguously expressed the essence .. Product #: 978-0-631-20510-4 Regular price: $35.42 $35.42 Auf Lager

The Search for the Perfect Language

Eco, Umberto

Making of Europe

Cover

1. Auflage Juli 1997
400 Seiten, Softcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd

ISBN: 978-0-631-20510-4
John Wiley & Sons

The idea that there once existed a language which perfectly and
unambiguously expressed the essence of all possible things and
concepts has occupied the minds of philosophers, theologians,
mystics and others for at least two millennia. This is an
investigation into the history of that idea and of its profound
influence on European thought, culture and history.

From the early Dark Ages to the Renaissance it was widely
believed that the language spoken in the Garden of Eden was just
such a language, and that all current languages were its decadent
descendants from the catastrophe of the Fall and at Babel. The
recovery of that language would, for theologians, express the
nature of divinity, for cabbalists allow access to hidden knowledge
and power, and for philosophers reveal the nature of truth.
Versions of these ideas remained current in the Enlightenment, and
have recently received fresh impetus in attempts to create a
natural language for artificial intelligence.

The story that Umberto Eco tells ranges widely from the writings
of Augustine, Dante, Descartes and Rousseau, arcane treatises on
cabbalism and magic, to the history of the study of language and
its origins. He demonstrates the initimate relation between
language and identity and describes, for example, how and why the
Irish, English, Germans and Swedes - one of whom presented God
talking in Swedish to Adam, who replied in Danish, while the
serpent tempted Eve in French - have variously claimed their
language as closest to the original. He also shows how the late
eighteenth-century discovery of a proto-language (Indo-European)
for the Aryan peoples was perverted to support notions of racial
superiority.

To this subtle exposition of a history of extraordinary
complexity, Umberto Eco links the associated history of the manner
in which the sounds of language and concepts have been written and
symbolized. Lucidly and wittily written, the book is, in sum, a
tour de force of scholarly detection and cultural
interpretation, providing a series of original perspectives on two
thousand years of European History.

The paperback edition of this book is not available through
Blackwell outside of North America.

Series Editor's Preface.

Introduction.

1. From Adam to Confusio Linguarum.

2. The Kabbalistic Pansemioticism.

3. The Perfect Language of Dante.

4. The Ars Magna of Raymond Lull.

5. The Monogenetic Hypothesis and the Mother Tongues.

6. Kabbalism and Lullism in Modern Culture.

7. The Perfect Language of Images.

8. Magic Language.

9. Polygraphies.

10. A Priori Philosophical Languages.

11. George Dalgarno.

12. John Wilkins.

13. Francis Lodwick.

14. From Liebniz to the Encyclopédie.

15. Philosophic Language from the Enlightenment to Today.

16. The Internatonal Auxiliary Languages.

Notes.

Bibliography.

Index.
"This is as much a history of the study of language and its origins as it is a tour de force pursuit using scholarly detection and cultural interpretation, thus providing a series of original perspectives on two thousand years of European history." The Medieval Review
Umberto Eco was born in Alessandria in 1932 and has been Professor of Semiotics at the University of Bologna since 1975 and the President of the International Center for Semiotic and Cognitive Studies at the Universityu of San Marino since 1988. His books include The Name of the Rose (1980), Foucault's Pendulum (1988) and the more recent works include Semiotics and Philosophy of Lanaguage (1984) and The Limits of Interpretation (1990).

U. Eco, University of Bologna