THE COGNITIVE APPROACH IN MODERN LINGUISTIC RESEARCH: THE INTERCONNECTION BETWEEN LANGUAGE AND THOUGHT
Abstract
The cognitive approach has emerged as one of the most influential paradigms in contemporary linguistics, fundamentally reshaping our understanding of the intricate relationship between language and thought. This article examines the theoretical foundations, methodological advancements, and empirical contributions of cognitive linguistics to the study of how linguistic structures reflect and shape cognitive processes. By integrating insights from psychology, neuroscience, anthropology, and philosophy, the cognitive perspective posits that language is not an autonomous modular system but an integral part of general human cognition. The discussion explores key concepts such as conceptual metaphor theory, embodied cognition, image schemas, and prototype theory, demonstrating their explanatory power in accounting for semantic extension, grammatical organization, and cross-linguistic variation. Particular attention is devoted to the dynamic interplay between linguistic categorization and mental representation, the role of embodied experience in meaning construction, and the implications for second language acquisition and computational modeling. In an era of rapidly evolving interdisciplinary research, the cognitive approach offers a unified framework that bridges the gap between linguistic form and human conceptualization, providing profound insights into the nature of mind, culture, and communication. The article underscores the enduring relevance of this paradigm in addressing complex questions about universality versus relativity in language-thought relations and highlights promising directions for future inquiry.