Of Minds and Language: A Dialogue with Noam Chomsky in the Basque Country
Of Minds and Language: A Dialogue with Noam Chomsky in the Basque Country
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Abstract
This book presents a state-of-the-art account of what we know and would like to know about language, mind, and brain. Chapters by leading researchers in linguistics, psycholinguistics, language acquisition, cognitive neuroscience, comparative cognitive psychology, and evolutionary biology are framed by an introduction and conclusion by Noam Chomsky, who places the biolinguistic enterprise in an historical context and helps define its agenda for the future. The questions explored include: What is our tacit knowledge of language? What is the faculty of language? How does it develop in the individual? How is that knowledge put to use? How is it implemented in the brain? How did that knowledge emerge in the species? The book includes the contributor's key discussions, which dramatically bring to life their enthusiasm for the enterprise and skill in communicating across disciplines. Everyone seriously interested in how language works and why it works the way it does are certain to find, if not all the answers, then a convincing, productive, and lively approach to the endeavour.
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Front Matter
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chapter 1Introduction
Massimo Piattelli-Palmarini and others
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Part 1: Overtures
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chapter 2Opening Remarks
Noam Chomsky
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chapter 3The Nature of Merge Consequences for Language, Mind, and Biology
Cedric Boeckx
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chapter 4The Foundational Abstractions
C R Gallistel
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chapter 5Evolingo The Nature of the Language Faculty
Marc D Hauser
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chapter 6Pointers to a Biology of Language?
Gabriel Dover
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chapter 7Language in an Epigenetic Framework
Donata Vercelli andMassimo Piattelli-Palmarini
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chapter 8 Brain Wiring Optimization and Non-genomic Nativism
Christopher Cherniak
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chapter 2Opening Remarks
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Part 2: On Language
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chapter 9Hierarchy, Merge, and Truth
Wolfram Hinzen
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chapter 10Two Interfaces
James Higginbotham
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chapter 11Movement and Concepts of Locality
Luigi Rizzi
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chapter 12Uninterpretable Features in Syntactic Evolution
Juan Uriagereka
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chapter 13The Brain Differentiates Hierarchical and Probabilistic Grammars
Angela D Friederici
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chapter 14Round Table: Language Universals: Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow
Cedric Boeckx and others
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chapter 9Hierarchy, Merge, and Truth
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Part 3: On Acquisition
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Part 4: Open Talks On Open Inquiries
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chapter 19The Illusion of Biological Variation: A Minimalist Approach to the Mind
Marc D Hauser
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chapter 20What is there in Universal Grammar? On innate and specific aspects of language
Itziar Laka
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chapter 21Individual Differences in Foreign Sound Perception: Perceptual or Linguistic Difficulties?
Núria Sebastián-Gallés
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chapter 22Language and the Brain
Angela D Friederici
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Conclusion
Noam Chomsky
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chapter 19The Illusion of Biological Variation: A Minimalist Approach to the Mind
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End Matter
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