Irene Heim
Irene Roswitha Heim is a linguist and noted specialist in semantics. She was a professor at the University of Texas at Austin and UCLA before finally moving to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1989, where she is Professor of Linguistics and a former Head of the Linguistics Section of the Department of Linguistics and Philosophy.
Irene Heim | |
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Alma mater | UMass Amherst |
Awards | Fellow of the Linguistic Society of America |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Semantics, generative grammar |
Institutions | MIT, UCLA, University of Texas at Austin |
Doctoral advisor | Barbara Partee |
She is probably most famous for her 1982 University of Massachusetts Amherst dissertation The semantics of definite and indefinite noun phrases.[1] In the work she argued (developing an insight by the philosopher David Lewis) that indefinite noun phrases like a cat in the sentence If a cat is not in Athens, she is in Rhodes are not quantifiers but free variables bound by an existential operator inserted in the sentence by a semantic operation that she dubbed existential closure.
She is also the co-author with Angelika Kratzer of one of the most influential textbooks of formal semantics,[2] and is a co-editor (also with Kratzer) of the journal Natural Language Semantics.
In 2010 Irene Heim was awarded a Senior Fellowship of the Zukunftskolleg at the University of Konstanz.[3]
References
- Heim, Irene (1988). The semantics of definite and indefinite noun phrases. New York: Garland Pub. ISBN 0-8240-5188-2.
- Kratzer, Angelika; Heim, Irene (1998). Semantics in generative grammar. Oxford: Blackwell. ISBN 0-631-19713-3.
- https://www.zukunftskolleg.uni-konstanz.de/people/personen-details/heim-irene-677/6338/13775/
External links
- "MIT Department of Linguistics: People: Faculty: Irene Heim". Retrieved 2009-06-02. Heim's MIT faculty page