Language in Thought and Action: Fifth Edition
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Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #13962 in Books
- Published on: 1991-01-01
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 196 pages
Features
- ISBN13: 9780156482400
- Condition: USED - VERY GOOD
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Editorial Reviews
About the Author
Samuel Ichiye Hayakawa (July 18, 1906 – February 27, 1992) was a Canadian-born American academic and political figure. He was an English professor, served as president of San Francisco State University and then a United States Senator from California from 1977 to 1983. Born in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, he was educated in the public schools of Calgary, Alberta and Winnipeg, Manitoba; received his undergraduate degree from the University of Manitoba in Winnipeg in 1927; graduate degrees in English from McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, in 1928, and the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1935.
Alan Hayakawa received his B.A. from Reed College in Portland, Oregon. He has worked as a reporter and editor for The Oregonian in Portland, as a Washington correspondent with Newhouse News Service in Washington, D.C., and is currently with The Patriot-News of Harrisburg,PA. Alan started at The Patriot-News as a writing coach and now manages the newspaper's information-on-request system called InsideLine (a telephone-based information system known generically as audiotext).
Customer Reviews
Man's crutch, language, dissected and explored
This book presents fundamental ways to examine the human relationship to language and thought. Hayakawa presents the building blocks of modern linguistic theories like NLP with precise and illuminating examinations of speech, human emotions, and "common sense."
This book is intruiging and at times disturbing. The study of propoganda is mind expanding and illistrative of the dark side of humanity. Think of it as a How-To manual to create a Orwellian 1984-like society.
I can't recommend this book more strongly. It will alter the way you think and relate to your own thoughts. Read this book.
Why should I care about semantics?
It's been said that language is what differentiates humans from the apes. But why language? Why not hawaiian shirts? Senator Hayakawa's short book explains why language, and particularly meaning, is so important. It stands alone on its own merits, or as an elegant frame to the debate addressed in Korzybski's monolithic 1933 work, _Science and Sanity._
Ever been in an argument? Ever get hot and bothered, maybe even start shouting, until you eventually realize that your disagreement is over the definition of terms? And did you ever stop to consider that there might be more than two sides to every story - maybe an infinite number? Come along as Hayakawa examines these issues in great detail.
The style of the book is so lucid, you'll almost feel as if you're being reminded of things you've always known. Does the book reveal universal truth? Or maybe just a skillful command of language?
I recommend this to any human who uses language to communicate or think. You'll never look at Hillary Clinton's "politics of meaning" the same way again.
Required reading for anyone who uses language, e.g., you.
Like a previous reviewer, I was required to read this book for an English class, and also like that reviewer I re-discovered it a few years back.
Senator Hayakawa's main point is that, since it is language we humans use in order to think, and since language has such an extraordinary power to influence others and ourselves, we should pay heed to how we use it and how we interpret it.
In *Language in Thought and Action* Hayakawa discusses ways of better understanding language, and therefore thought, and therefore action, including the use of the "operational definition" and the need to recognize different levels of abstraction.
His essay comparing poetry and advertising is, all by itself, worth the price of the book. You'll never again be so smug about your pronouncements or those of others after reading about two-valued logic versus the multi-valued orientation. You'll learn why the words "Tell me more" can make a difference to you.
I like this book so much I decided to mail several copies to people I know as surprise gifts, along with a letter explaining my enthusiasm for it.
If you use language, if you think, if you act, you should read this book.
Update of November 2009: I am now reading this book for a fourth time. You can read a long excerpt at [...].




