Aproximación al límite de una metonimia
Keywords:
philosophy of language, semantics, antinomy, metonymy, reality principleAbstract
A metonymy expresses in a figure of speech an approximation to what is real as something indefinite that, at the same time, returns to whoever uses it the dilemmas and limits of his own indeterminacy. Starting from the so-called «regulative principle» proposed by Kant, and later renewed by Peirce, the possibility of a metonymy expressing the indeterminacy of what something actually is is raised.
References
Kant, Immanuel. Crítica de la razón pura. Traducido por José Rovira Armengol. Editorial Losada, 1960.
Deleuze, G, y F. Guattari. What is Philosophy. Traducido por H. Tomlison y G. Burchell. Columbia University Press, 1994.
Palés Matos, Luis. «Puerta al tiempo en tres voces». Ciudad Seva. [Consultado en línea en https://ciudadseva.com/texto/puerta-al-tiempo-en-tres-voces/]