front cover of Essays on Logic, Ethics, and Universal Grammar
Essays on Logic, Ethics, and Universal Grammar
Edited by Philip Schofield
University College London, 2025
Never before published in authentic form, this collection of Jeremy Bentham’s essays expands on his ideas about logic, language, ethics, and grammar. 

Best known as the founder of the ethical theory of utilitarianism, Bentham’s philosophical contributions spanned political economy, judicial administration, prison reform, policing, religion, and many more fields. This new addition to The Collected Works of Jeremy Bentham deals with his ideas about logic, language, ethics, and grammar. Distributed across four essays written between 1814 and 1816 and an appendix, it includes discussions of methodization, ontology, real and fictitious entities, and propositions as the fundamental components of language. In addition to constituting a major contribution to the history of logic and language, this collection establishes the philosophical basis for classical utilitarianism and Chrestomathia, Bentham’s major work outlining his materialist theory of language. 
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Universal Grammar and Narrative Form
David Herman
Duke University Press, 1995
In a major rethinking of the functions, methods, and aims of narrative poetics, David Herman exposes important links between modernist and postmodernist literary experimentation and contemporary language theory. Ultimately a search for new tools for narrative theory, his work clarifies complex connections between science and art, theory and culture, and philosophical analysis and narrative discourse.
Following an extensive historical overview of theories about universal grammar, Herman examines Joyce’s Ulysses, Kafka’s The Trial, and Woolf’s Between the Acts as case studies of modernist literary narratives that encode grammatical principles which were (re)fashioned in logic, linguistics, and philosophy during the same period. Herman then uses the interpretation of universal grammar developed via these modernist texts to explore later twentieth-century cultural phenomena. The problem of citation in the discourses of postmodernism, for example, is discussed with reference to syntactic theory. An analysis of Peter Greenaway’s The Cook, The Thief, His Wife, and Her Lover raises the question of cinematic meaning and draws on semantic theory. In each case, Herman shows how postmodern narratives encode ideas at work in current theories about the nature and function of language.
Outlining new directions for the study of language in literature, Universal Grammar and Narrative Form provides a wealth of information about key literary, linguistic, and philosophical trends in the twentieth century.
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