This book implements a multidisciplinary approach in describing language
both in its ontogenetic development and in its close interrelationship
with other human subsystems such as thought, memory, and activity, with
a focus on the semantic component of the evolutionary-synthetic theory.
The volume analyzes, among others, the mechanisms for grammatical
polysemy, and brings to light the structural unity of artefact and
natural concepts (such as CHAIR, ROAD, LAKE, RIVER, TREE). Additionally,
object and motor concepts are defined in terms of the language of
thought, and their representation in neurobiological memory codes is
discussed; finally, the hierarchic structure of basic meanings of
concrete nouns is shown to arise as a result of their step-by-step
development in ontogeny.