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Research Seminar - June 21, 2000

Seminar Announcement



Title: Lecture 3: A Critique of Universal Grammar
Speaker: Professor Michael Arbib

Adjunct Professor of Computer Science
Date: Wednesday 21st June, 2000
Time: 2.00 - 4.00 pm
Venue: Seminar Room 1.24


Abstract

What evolved that allows humans to learn languages so readily? Many accept Chomsky's answer of "Universal Grammar", a parameterized master grammar which reduces the task of learning the syntax (as distinct from the lexicon) of a language to a mere "setting of parameters". We shall review arguments put forward for this view and then demolish [!] them. We will then briefly review alternative views as a basis for the argument to be presented in the concluding lecture. In particular, we will argue for a view of "protolanguage" very different from that put forward by Bickerton, arguing that the naming of action-object frames preceded the discovery of "words" in the modern sense of units for the compositional formation of utterances.

Bickerton, D., 1995, Language and Human Behavior, Seattle: University of Washington Press.
Calvin, W.H., and Bickerton, D., 2000, Lingua ex Machina: Reconciling Darwin and Chomsky with the Human Brain, Cambridge, MA: A Bradford Book/The MIT Press.
Foley, W.A., and van Valin, R.D., Jr., 1984, Functional Syntax and Universal Grammar, (Cambridge Studies in Linguistics 38), Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Gopnik, A., and Meltzoff, A.N., 1997, Words, Thoughts, and Theories, Cambridge, MA: A Bradford Book/The MIT Press.
Gopnik, M., Ed., 1997, The Inheritance and Innateness of Grammars, (Vancouver Studies in Cognitive Science 6), New York, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Pinker, S. & Bloom, P. (1990) Natural Language and Natural Selection. Behavioral and Brain Sciences: 13, 707-784.
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