Esa Itkonen Explained

Esa Itkonen (born January 3, 1944) is a Finnish linguist, philosopher and language theorist. He is professor emeritus of general linguistics at the University of Turku.[1] [2] Itkonen has authored several publications on linguistic methodology, philosophy of linguistics, history of linguistics, and linguistic typology. He has defended a humanist approach to linguistics, criticising sociobiology, generative grammar, and Cognitive Linguistics.

Career

Esa Itkonen earned his PhD at the University of Helsinki in 1974.[3] He was Professor of general linguistics at the University of Turku from 1982 to 2012 and Docent of philosophy at the University of Jyväskylä from 1988 to 2012.

Linguistic theory

In his 2005 book Analogy as Structure and Process, Itkonen argues that analogy is the most central concept in language formation. He proposes a distinction between analogy as structure, referring to a static relation between different systems; and analogy as process, or a dynamism which produces analogical structures. According to Itkonen, various forms of analogical reasoning are hidden behind other terminology in the study of language and other cognitive domains.[4]

Books in English

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: People: Esa Itkonen . University of Turku . 2020-01-20 .
  2. Itkonen . Esa . 2018 . The central role of imagination in linguistics, philosophy and logic . Public Journal of Semiotics . 8 . 2 . 49–74 . 10.37693/pjos.2018.8.20257 . 213461986 . 2020-01-20 . free .
  3. Itkonen . Esa . 1974 . Linguistics and metascience . PhD thesis . University of Turku . 951-99029-4-5.
  4. Glaz. Adam. 2016. Book review: Esa Itkonen, Analogy as structure and process. Approaches in linguistics, cognitive psychology and philosophy of science. Word. 62. 2. 139–142. 10.1080/00437956.2016.1180003. 148454697 .