Pingree '79 goes to Congress
COA Achieves Carbon Neutrality
NY Times Features COA
COA among Top 10 Percent of Colleges
Food Systems Program Launched
Holiday Specialities at the Dorr
Student receives EPA grant
Site Map Search Calendar Download Contact Library
About COA Admissions Academics Alumni Summer Programs Support COA
Academics
> How We Teach
> Why We Offer One Degree
> Faculty/Staff
> Academic Philosophy
> Degree Requirements
> Resource Areas
> Focus Areas
> Course Listings
> Off Campus Study
> Design Your Own Curriculum
> Research and Travel Support
> Thorndike Library
> Academic Facilities
> Student Work
> Graduate Program
> Educational Studies
> Marine Studies
> Additional Information
> Registration
> Academic Calendar
> Dates and Deadlines
> NEASC Reaccreditation
> Ethical Research Review Board - ERRB

Today @ COA


"My parents are amazed by all the resources available to me and the thing is, the resources here are mostly people..."
Ian Mohler

Course Catalog

Use the following Search to find information regarding courses at College of the Atlantic.  You can search by Resource Area, Instructor, or Text.


Resource Area Instructor Search Text

Language I: Form and Function - HS616

Meets the following requirements: HS

There is a great deal of contemporary interest in the nature and function of language across the human studies and behavioral sciences.  The major issues involve the attempt to understand the relation between humans and their language and between language and the world.  How is language possible, is it innate or logical, what does it tell us about the human mind?  How can we use language to speak about the world, is a complete theory of the nature and function of language possible, what could such a theory look like?  The purpose of this course is to introduce students to some of the major theories in this area so that they can read and participate in contemporary discussions in this area.  It will deal with the writings of some of the major philosophers in the analytic tradition from Frege, Russell, and early Wittgenstein through Quine, Davidson and Austin to various contemporary discussions of speech act theory, structuralism and conceptual-role semantics.  This class will be taught in an advanced seminar style.  Evaluation will be based on seminar presentations and a final research paper.

Level: Intermediate/Advanced.  Class limit: 15. *HS*

Instructor:
John Visvader

College of the Atlantic, 105 Eden Street, Bar Harbor, ME 04609
Email: inquiry@coa.edu
Phone: (207) 288-5015
Fax: (207) 288-4126