Mark Johnson (johnson-m)
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Bibliography
Johnson, Mark. 1987a. The Body in the Mind: The Bodily Basis of Meaning, Imagination, and Reason. Chicago, Illinois: University of Chicago Press.
Johnson, Mark. 1987b. “The Use of Knowledge of Language.” Unpublished manuscript, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Johnson, Mark. 1988a. Attribute-Value Logic and the Theory of Grammar. Stanford, California: CSLI Publications.
Johnson, Mark. 1988b. “Some Constraints on Embodied Analogical Understanding.” in Analogical Reasoning. Perspectives of Artificial Intelligence, Cognitive Science and Philosophy, edited by D. H. Helman, pp. 25–40. Synthese Library n. 197. Dordrecht: D. Reidel Publishing Co.
Johnson, Mark. 1990. “Expressing Disjunctive and Negative Feature Constraints with Classical First-Order Logic.” in ACL-90. Proceedings of the 28th Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics, edited by Robert C. Berwick. Morristown, New Jersey: Association for Computational Linguistics.
Johnson, Mark. 1991. “Does Natural Philosophy Prove the Immaterial? A Rejoinder [to Knasas (1990)].” American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 65(1): 97–105.
Johnson, Mark. 1992a. “Aquinas’s Changing Evaluation of Plato on Creation.” American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 66(1): 81–88.
Johnson, Mark. 1992b. “Another Look at St. Thomas and the Plurality of the Literal Sense of Scripture.” Medieval Philosophy and Theology 2: 117–141.
Johnson, Mark. 1993. Moral Imagination: Implications of Cognitive Science for Ethics. Chicago, Illinois: University of Chicago Press.
Johnson, Mark. 1994. “Two Ways of Formalizing Grammars.” Linguistics and Philosophy 17(3): 221–248.
Johnson, Mark. 1998a. “PCFG Models of Linguistic Tree Representations.” Computational Linguistics 24(4): 613–632.
Johnson, Mark. 1998b. “The Effect of Alternative Tree Representations on Tree Bank Grammars.” in, pp. 39–48.
Johnson, Mark. 1999. “A Resource Sensitive Interpretation of Lexical Functional Grammar.” Journal of Logic, Language, and Information 8(1): 45–81.
Johnson, Mark. 2006. “Cognitive Science.” in A Companion to Pragmatism, edited by John R. Shook and Joseph Margolis, pp. 369–377. Blackwell Companions to Philosophy. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, doi:10.1002/9780470997079.
Johnson, Mark. 2007. The Meaning of the Body. Aesthetics of Human Understanding. Chicago, Illinois: University of Chicago Press.
Johnson, Mark. 2010. “Cognitive Science and Dewey’s Theory of Mind, Thought, and Language.” in The Cambridge Companion to Dewey, edited by Molly Cochran, pp. 123–144. Cambridge Companions to Philosophy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Johnson, Mark. 2013. “Dewey’s Big Idea for Aesthetics.” in Rethinking Aesthetics. The Role of Body in Design, edited by Ritu Bhatt, pp. 36–50. London: Routledge.
Johnson, Mark. 2014. Morality for Humans. Ethical Understanding from the Perspective of Cognitive Science. Chicago, Illinois: University of Chicago Press.
Johnson, Mark. 2016. “Moral Imagination.” in The Routledge Handbook of Philosophy of Imagination, edited by Amy Kind, pp. 355–367. Routledge Handbooks in Philosophy. London: Routledge.
Johnson, Mark. 2017. Embodied Mind, Meaning, and Reason. How Our Bodies Give Rise to Understanding. Chicago, Illinois: University of Chicago Press.
Johnson, Mark. 2018. The Aesthetics of Meaning and Thought. The Bodily Roots of Philosophy, Science, Morality, and Art. Chicago, Illinois: University of Chicago Press.
Johnson, Mark and Klein, Ewan. 1986. “Discourse, Anaphora, and Parsing.” csli–86–63. Stanford, California: Center for the Study of Language; Information.
Lakoff, George and Johnson, Mark. 1980. Metaphors We Live By. Chicago, Illinois: University of Chicago Press.
Further References
Knasas, John F. X. 1990. “ ‘Does Natural Philosophy Prove the
Immaterial?’: An Answer to Mark Johnson.”
American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 64(2): 265–269.