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Dictionary of the History of Ideas

Studies of Selected Pivotal Ideas
  
  

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BIBLIOGRAPHY

General studies of English linguistics of the seventeenth
century are: D. C. Allen, “Some Theories of the Growth
and Origin of Language in Milton's Age,” Philosophical
Quarterly,
28, 2 (1949), 5-16, and L. Formigari, Linguistica
ed empirismo nel Seicento inglese
(Bari, 1970). Important
references are also contained in L. Rosiello, Linguistica
illuminista
(Bologna, 1967).

On the linguistic doctrines of Francis Bacon see: O.
Funke, Sprachphilosophische Probleme bei Francis Bacon
(1929), in Gesammelte Aufsätze zur Anglistik und zur


076

Sprachphilosophie (Bern, 1965); R. Wallace, Francis Bacon
on Communication and Rhetoric
(Chapel Hill, 1943);
W. S. Howell, Logic and Rhetoric in England: 1500-1700
(Princeton, 1956; 2nd ed. New York, 1961), pp. 365-76; P.
Rossi, Francesco Bacone, Dalla magia alla scienza (Bari,
1957), Chs. IV-VI; E. De Mas, “La filosofia linguistica e
poetica di Francesco Bacone,” Filosofia, 14 (1963), 495-542.
On the influence of Bacon the studies of R. F. Jones, re-
printed in The Seventeenth Century (Stanford and London,
1951), are essential.

On proposals for an artificial language: O. Funke, Zum
Weltsprachenproblem in England im 17. Jahrhundert

(Heidelberg, 1929); J. Cohen, “On the Project of a Universal
Character,” Mind, 63 (1954), 49-63; B. DeMott, “Comenius
and the Real Character in England,” P.M.L.A., 70, 5 (1955);
idem, “Science versus Mnemonics,” Isis, 48 (1957), 3-12;
P. Rossi, Clavis universalis (Milan and Naples, 1960); V.
Salmon, “Language-Planning in Seventeenth-Century
England: Its Context and Aims,” in In Memory of J. R.
Firth,
eds. C. E. Bazell, J. Catford, M. A. K. Halliday (Lon-
don, 1966), 370-97.

On Hobbes: R. M. Martin, “On the Semantics of Hobbes,”
Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, 14 (1953-54),
205-11; M. Robbe, “Zu Problemen der Sprachphilosophie
bei Thomas Hobbes,” Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie,
8, 4 (1960), 433-650; D. Krook, “Thomas Hobbes' Doctrine
of Meaning and Truth,” Philosophy, 31 (1956), 3-22; H.
Törnebohm, “A Study in Hobbes' Theory of Denotation and
Truth,” Theoria, 26 (1960), 53-70; A. G. Gargani, “Idea,
mondo, e linguaggio in T. Hobbes e J. Locke,” Annali della
Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa,
2nd series, 35 (1966),
251-92.

On Locke: R. I. Aaron, John Locke (1937; reprint Oxford,
1965), Ch. VI; idem, The Theory of Universals (1952; 2nd
ed. Oxford, 1967), Ch. II; J. W. Yolton, “Locke and the
Seventeenth-Century Logic of Ideas,” Journal of the History
of Ideas,
16 (1955), 431-52; D. A. Givner, “Scientific Pre-
conceptions in Locke's Philosophy of Language,” Journal
of the History of Ideas,
23 (1962), 340-54; R. I. Armstrong,
“John Locke's 'Doctrine of Signs': A New Metaphysics,”
Journal of the History of Ideas, 26 (1965), 369-82; C. A.
Viano, John Locke, Dal razionalismo all'illuminismo (Turin,
1960), 469-76.

LIA FORMIGARI

[See also Baconianism; Language; Macrocosm and Micro-
cosm; Metaphor; Myth; Nature; Structuralism.]