Mind Design and Minimal SyntaxOxford University Press, 24/02/2006 - 320 من الصفحات This book introduces generative grammar as an area of study and asks what it tells us about the human mind. Wolfram Hinzen lays the foundation for the unification of modern generative linguistics with the philosophies of mind and language. He introduces Chomsky's program of a 'minimalist' syntax as a novel explanatory vision of the human mind. He explains how the Minimalist Program originated in work in cognitive science, biology, linguistics, and philosophy, and examines its implications for work in these fields. He considers the way the human mind is designed when seen as an arrangement of structural patterns in nature, and argues that its design is the product not so much of adaptive evolutionary history as of principles and processes that are ahistorical and internalist in character. Linguistic meaning, he suggests, arises in the mind as a consequence of structures emerging on formal rather than functional grounds. From this he substantiates an unexpected and deeply unfashionable notion of human nature. Clearly written in nontechnical language and assuming a limited knowledge of the fields it examines and links, Minimal Mind Design will appeal to a wide range of scholars in linguistics, philosophy, and cognitive science. It also provides an exceptionally clear insight into the nature and aims of Chomsky's Minimalist Program. |
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الصفحة x
... Chomsky (1966: 19, fn. 39) remarks that it amounts to much the same thing as the modern notion of the 'generative grammar' of a language. Interestingly, and in contradistinction to the notion of form used in formal logic, it included ...
... Chomsky (1966: 19, fn. 39) remarks that it amounts to much the same thing as the modern notion of the 'generative grammar' of a language. Interestingly, and in contradistinction to the notion of form used in formal logic, it included ...
الصفحة xi
... Chomsky, that human language is a good example. Gould's balanced dichotomy should alert us to the current predominance of functionalist and externalist thinking about the mind, even in research that falls outside the theory of mind that ...
... Chomsky, that human language is a good example. Gould's balanced dichotomy should alert us to the current predominance of functionalist and externalist thinking about the mind, even in research that falls outside the theory of mind that ...
الصفحة xii
... (Chomsky 1959). The meanings of these terms have changed, but it is worth asking how much. There are various philosophical tendencies today that are said to be 'rationalist', be it because of their emphasis on the objectivity of reason ...
... (Chomsky 1959). The meanings of these terms have changed, but it is worth asking how much. There are various philosophical tendencies today that are said to be 'rationalist', be it because of their emphasis on the objectivity of reason ...
الصفحة xiii
... Chomsky is the philosophical thinker in which I see the above trias of methodological naturalism, internalism, and rationalism come together, and although this book does not claim to be a correct analysis of his views, or even attempts ...
... Chomsky is the philosophical thinker in which I see the above trias of methodological naturalism, internalism, and rationalism come together, and although this book does not claim to be a correct analysis of his views, or even attempts ...
الصفحة xiv
... . Chapter 6 pulls the various strands of the book together in a synthesis that is centred on the question of human mind design. Acknowledgements Chomsky's The Minimalist Program fell into my hands accidentally xiv Preface.
... . Chapter 6 pulls the various strands of the book together in a synthesis that is centred on the question of human mind design. Acknowledgements Chomsky's The Minimalist Program fell into my hands accidentally xiv Preface.
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abstract actual appears apply argued argument arise assume become biology Cambridge causes child Chomsky claim cognitive communication complex computational concepts conclusion constraints construction contains depend derivation determine distinction empirical example existence experience explain explanatory expression external fact function further give given grammar happens head hence human language human nature idea independent interface internal interpretation John kind knowledge laws learning lexical linguistic logical look matter meaning mechanisms mental Merge mind move movement noted notion object operation organism particular perfect philosophy phrase physical position possible Press principles problem projection properties question rational reality reason reference relations representations role rules seems selection semantic sense sentence simply sound specific structure suggests syntactic syntax talk theory things thought true understanding University