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Lingua ex Machina: Reconciling Darwin and Chomsky with the Human Brain (2001) 요약정보 및 구매

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지은이 Calvin Bickerton
발행년도 2001-10-01
판수 1판
페이지 312
ISBN 9780262531986
도서상태 구매가능
판매가격 5,000원
포인트 0점
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  • Lingua ex Machina: Reconciling Darwin and Chomsky with the Human Brain (2001)
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  • A machine for language? Certainly, say the neurophysiologists, busy studying the language specializations of the human brain and trying to identify their evolutionary antecedents. Linguists such as Noam Chomsky talk about machinelike "modules" in the brain for syntax, arguing that language is more an instinct (a complex behavior triggered by simple environmental stimuli) than an acquired skill like riding a bicycle.But structured language presents the same evolutionary problems as feathered forelimbs for flight: you need a lot of specializations to fly even a little bit. How do you get them, if evolution has no foresight and the intermediate stages do not have intermediate payoffs? Some say that the Darwinian scheme for gradual species self-improvement cannot explain our most valued human capability, the one that sets us so far above the apes, language itself.William Calvin and Derek Bickerton suggest that other evolutionary developments, not directly related to language, allowed language to evolve in a way that eventually promoted a Chomskian syntax. They compare these intermediate behaviors to the curb-cuts originally intended for wheelchair users. Their usefulness was soon discovered by users of strollers, shopping carts, rollerblades, and so on. The authors argue that reciprocal altruism and ballistic movement planning were "curb-cuts" that indirectly promoted the formation of structured language. Written in the form of a dialogue set in Bellagio, Italy, Lingua ex Machina presents an engaging challenge to those who view the human capacity for language as a winner-take-all war between Chomsky and Darwin.
  • 1.The villa serbelloni 2.What are words? 3.Why putting words together isn't easy 4.Bigger than a word,smaller than a sentence 5.Languge in the brain 6.How are memories stored? 7.Hexagonal mosaics and darwin machines 8.A Common code:the brain"s "Esperanto"problem 9.Protolanguage emerging 10.Reciprocal altruism as the predecessor of argument structure 11.Role links for words 12.The word tree as a secondary use of throwing's segmented movement planner 13.Corticocotical coherence promotes a many-voiced symphonic sentence 14.The pump and the slingshot 15.Darwin and chomsky together at last
  • William H. Calvin is Affiliate Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at the University of Washington, Seattle. His books include The Cerebral Code (MIT Press, 1996). Derek Bickerton is Professor of Linguistics, Emeritus, at the University of Hawaii, Honolulu. He is the author of Roots of Language, Language and Species, and Language and Human Behavior.
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  • Lingua ex Machina: Reconciling Darwin and Chomsky with the Human Brain (2001)
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