I don't know what 'human facilities' are meant to be, but I do believe that language must be studied in the context of it's history, development, and socio-cultural specificities, along with it's biological and cognitive aspects. I believe in a kind of wholism and embeddedness of language, if it could be put that way. The exact opposite, that is, of the Chomskian program which seeks to isolate, dehistoricize, desocialize, and place language under the air-tight seal of a hermeticism for nothing more than ideological prejudice. — StreetlightX
I don't know what 'human facilities' are meant to be, but I do believe that language must be studied in the context of it's history, development, and socio-cultural specificities, along with it's biological and cognitive aspects. — StreetlightX
. It seems to imply, early on, that Chomskyans thought that a universal grammar literally meant that all the world's languages had a structure similar to the European languages the researchers spoke (not only is this not true, but Chomsky was a scholar of Hebrew, a Semitic language, and generativists were early on studying languages like Japanese – that languages existed in a wide variety was utterly common knowledge, of which everyone was aware, including him and the other generativists!) — Snakes Alive
Like, this is simply a preposterous statement on the face of it, and the only way to understand how anyone could hold such a view is to recognise the grip of ideology at work. This is the kind of rubbish one can come up with when one hews to Chomskian views on language, one that requires one to ignore an ocean of cognitive dissonance. In the face of this kind of tripe, one has to wonder, who exactly is being hyperbolic?
And you really need to drop the idea that Chomskian linguistics is scientific. It's simply not. It's self-immunizing against all counter-evidence, and its empirical basis is limited to nothing other than sheer speculation. It's creationism in the realm of linguistic theory. — StreetlightX
It is clear too that much of what we call 'language' is common to other species like, bodily gestures, — fresco
cognitive deflationists (Behaviourists) would argue that there is nothing special about 'languaging' which amounts to no more than a complex behaviour which enhances social co-ordination. — fresco
Firstly, our capacity for language is not infinite. The number of possible sequences of sounds we can make is infinite, but we cannot sounds indefinitely. We acquire shared language at a limited rate, and we have a limited capacity to store information pertaining to language (the idea-symbol relationships encoded in the brain). — VagabondSpectre
Secondly, words and language as we know them aren't the only kind of communication. As evolving social animals, our distant ancestors (the tree of hominids we're related to, and beyond) have been refining language capacity for eons. — VagabondSpectre
You may want to conclude that if we can set dogs down the vocal language road in just a few thousand years of artificial selection, this is evidence of the sudden emergence of communication skills in our ancestral homonids, but we could also interpret this as evidence that the basic language and communication structures are far more ancient (and have been cooking for far longer) than Chomsky wants to reckon. — VagabondSpectre
A sudden "re-wiring of the brain in an individual" is incredibly fantastical. It's entirely possible that a small adaptation which enhanced language capacity snowballed as the mutation spread and refined, but this optimization would be gradual (and is in fact still occurring to this day). — VagabondSpectre
The relevant question is what is inherited, and how this inheritance (which magically evolved) functions to underpin the FLN. Chomsky offers not a single biological mechanism that would meet these two criteria, other than to handwave some kind of evolutionary exaptation as a promissory note in its place. This is like trying to say that we've inherited the ability to walk without talking about legs and gravity, and then, to add insult to injury, further speculating that we may never know what allows us to walk, other than to note that we possess 'the faculty' for it. It's so incredibly stupid that anyone who who even feels a jot of sympathy for Chomsky should feel their intelligence insulted. — StreetlightX
Chomsky's proposal is at once very specific (it's the FLN, which is comprised of recursion, exclusively), and entirely undertheorized (how is it inherited, and how does it function?: NFI). — StreetlightX
Obviously, that doesn't accurately describe the situation! Again, you shouldn't be getting your opinions about a movement from its ideological opponents – be better informed and fairer-minded! — Snakes Alive
It's like saying arithmetic developed by gradual steps. That's not the case. Either you have it or you don't. You don't go from 1 to the concept of infinity in a step-by-step manner. — Xtrix
But given evidence for a burst in creativity a couple hundred thousand years or so ago, and given how small a time frame that really is, it's hard to believe we gradually acquired our current capacity for language. To suggest it's "still occurring to this day" is absurd. I suppose our capacity for arithmetic is also evolving? — Xtrix
Primitive number systems are very basic. They go something like "One, Two, Three, more than three, more than all my fingers and toes". Depending on our need for precision and high quantity arithmetic, it's not necessarily obvious at all, from the conceptual systems we use to perform it, that all the numbers between one and infinity exist.. — VagabondSpectre
Actually, yes we did... — VagabondSpectre
Children aren't born with inherent comprehension of arithmetic, and if we did not teach them our number system and the operations associated with it, they would likely have very limited capacity to perform arithmetic. — VagabondSpectre
There's no creativity burst 100k years ago that I'm aware of... — VagabondSpectre
But yes, we're still evolving, and yes, if there are selection forces favoring math or language skills, then the underlying genetic markers which yield those inherent capacities are still being optimized by the exploratory genetic algorithm that is sexual reproduction. — VagabondSpectre
If the problem you're having is with the speculative aspects of how language evolved, fine. — Xtrix
Quite literally, he has to be committed, on pain of incoherence, to the insane idea that language initially evolved for means other than language. Which would be fine for a great deal of other exaptations, except that language is so incredibly specialized that the suggestion is pure madness. — StreetlightX
Quite literally, he has to be committed, on pain of incoherence, to the insane idea that language initially evolved for means other than language. — StreetlightX
It just popped into existence one fine day, and will remain the same forevermore.
If that isn't magic, I don't know what is. [...]
And that's the thing: this is a problem specific to Chomsky's position, and not one facing evolutionary accounts of language in general. — StreetlightX
Are you ridiculing as stupid the position of punctuated equilibrium? — javra
No, I'm not. That Chomsky's thin gruel speculation on language amounts to "language popped into existence somehow somewhen because of totally unspecified changes to something somewhere probably genetic but we really have no idea, and then somehow somewhen probably started to be used by humans because no idea" has nothing to do with the reality of PE. — StreetlightX
punctuated equilibrium would account for a cognitive know-how of grammar that is genetically inherited rather than behavioristically learned — javra
The problem is that anyone who understands just how insane Chomsky's take on language is would be able to see the evolutionary problem for it coming from a mile away - by decoupling language from communication and making it a wholly cognitive faculty, Chomsky can't, by way of design - that is to say, prior and unemprically to any consideration of evidence - he can't have it so that language was in any way evolved by means natural selection. Which is of course exactly the position he is committed to. — StreetlightX
Quite literally, he has to be committed, on pain of incoherence, to the insane idea that language initially evolved for means other than language. — StreetlightX
Not to mention that all exaptations that we are aware of were further subject to refinement by natural selection after that change in function - something else that Chomsky has to, and does in fact, deny. — StreetlightX
So we end up in this evolutionarily-nonsense position: language did not evolve via natural selection for any language- specific task, and once it came to be used for those tasks, it could not be subject to natural selection then either. It just popped into existence one fine day, and will remain the same forevermore. — StreetlightX
I get the sarcasm and your dislike, but I don't yet get why. — javra
The exception clause that language is special makes no sense to me – it's 'specialized?' Huh? — Snakes Alive
The exaptation thesis has to ignore all of this, because it is utterly committed to the idea that language evolved for means other than language. — StreetlightX
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