@article{8ed7d13e-7cc3-430a-a13c-e09d241fcac0, author = {Andrzej Pawelec}, title = {“A HUMAN FACE” OF COGNITIVE LINGUISTICS}, journal = {Studia Linguistica Universitatis Iagellonicae Cracoviensis}, volume = {2017}, number = {Volume 134, Issue 3}, year = {2017}, issn = {1897-1059}, pages = {265-272},keywords = {Cognitive Linguistics; linguistic mentalism; figurative language; articulation}, abstract = {In this article, I want to put forward the following argument: Cognitive Linguistics – after a long hegemony of Chomskyan formalist linguistics – has offered models of language as “motivated” by general and prior cognitive abilities; as such it has been able to provide representations of a much wider range of linguistic phenomena (both grammatical and lexical); however, the “human face” of Cognitive Linguistics is that of a generic human being rather than that of actual people: members of particular social communities in which languages develop through “figuration” and “articulation”.}, doi = {10.4467/20834624SL.17.018.7092}, url = {https://ejournals.eu/en/journal/studia-linguistica-uic/article/a-human-face-of-cognitive-linguistics} }