| Alphabet Of Human Thought |
Article Index for Alphabet |
Website Links For Alphabet |
Information AboutAlphabet Of Human Thought |
| CATEGORIES ABOUT ALPHABET OF HUMAN THOUGHT | |
| philosophy of language | |
| history of philosophy | |
| philosophy articles needing attention | |
|
René Descartes suggested that the Lexicon of a Universal Language should consist of primitive elements. The systematic combination of these elements, according to syntactical rules, would generate "an infinity of different words." In the early 18th Century , Gottfried Leibniz outlined his Characteristica Universalis , an artificial language in which Grammatical and Logic al structure would coincide, which would allow much reasoning to be reduced to calculation. The basic elements of his ''characteristica'' would be pictographic characters representing unambiguously a limited number of elementary concepts. Leibniz called the inventory of these concepts "the alphabet of human thought." There are quite a few mentions of the ''characteristica'' in Leibniz's writings, but he never set out any details. SEE ALSO |
|
|