论证(复杂分析)
领域
失调家庭
意义(存在)
心理学
语言学
精神分裂症(面向对象编程)
人际交往
社会心理学
哲学
医学
心理治疗师
政治学
精神科
内科学
法学
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.eurpsy.2016.01.1885
摘要
Introduction The private language argument was introduced by Ludwig Wittengstein in his Philosophical Investigations (1953). For Wittengstein, language is a rule-governed activity and a language in principle unintelligible to anyone but its originating user is impossible, as even the originator would fail to establish meanings for its putative signs. The private language argument is of paramount significance in modern debates about the nature of language and mind and continues to be disputed. Language disorder has been described since the first accounts of Schizophrenia. Multiple studies have reported anomalies at multiple levels of language processing, from lexical and syntactic particularities to the discourse field, as well as structural and functional abnormalities in brain regions that are involved with language perception and processing. Objectives and aims We aim to critically assess the Wittengstein's argument in the light of recent developments in neuroscience of language. Results and conclusions We conclude that in some patients diagnosed with schizophrenia, presenting a significant language impairment, one can infer a dysfunctional process, in which the language becomes progressively more private and the meaning of utterances harder to ascertain in the realm of interpersonal communication. The privatization of language might contribute to the social cognition deficits and the so-called negative symptomatology of these patients. Disclosure of interest The authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.
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