scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

The faculty of language: what's special about it? ☆

Steven Pinker, +1 more
- 01 Mar 2005 - 
- Vol. 95, Iss: 2, pp 201-236
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
The approach is sufficiently problematic that it cannot be used to support claims about evolution and related arguments that language is not an adaptation, namely that it is "perfect," non-redundant, unusable in any partial form, and badly designed for communication.
About
This article is published in Cognition.The article was published on 2005-03-01 and is currently open access. It has received 850 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Language acquisition & Biolinguistics.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The myth of language universals: Language diversity and its importance for cognitive science

TL;DR: This target article summarizes decades of cross-linguistic work by typologists and descriptive linguists, showing just how few and unprofound the universal characteristics of language are, once the authors honestly confront the diversity offered to us by the world's 6,000 to 8,000 languages.
Journal ArticleDOI

How the mind works

Journal ArticleDOI

Plans and the Structure of Behavior

TL;DR: Miller, Galanter, and Pribram as discussed by the authors discuss the difference between the brain and its vast number of parallel channels, but few operations, and the modern high-speed computer with its few channels and vast numbers of operations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Darwin's mistake: Explaining the discontinuity between human and nonhuman minds

TL;DR: It is suggested that recent symbolic-connectionist models of cognition shed new light on the mechanisms that underlie the gap between human and nonhuman minds.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Speech perception by budgerigars (Melopsittacus undulatus): Spoken vowels

TL;DR: In this article, the authors trained five budgerigars using operant conditioning procedures on asame-different task, which was structured so that response latencies would provide a measure of stimulus similarity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Language as a natural object – linguistics as a natural science

TL;DR: The authors examine the foundations of the Minimalist Program and its antecedents and draw parallelisms with meta-methodological foundations in better-developed sciences such as physics and argue that such parallelisms, such parallelism, help direct inquiry in linguistics and cognitive science/biology and unify both disciplines.
Journal ArticleDOI

Beyond fast mapping: young children's extensions of novel words and novel facts.

TL;DR: Two studies are reported in which 2-4-year-old children learned novel words and novel facts for unfamiliar objects and then were asked to extend the words and facts to additional exemplars of the training objects and results show that by 2 years of age, children honor the necessary extendibility of novel count nouns but are uncertain about the extendability of arbitrary facts.
Journal ArticleDOI

Organization in the Perception of Speech by Young Infants

TL;DR: The authors found that 3-and 4-month-old infants are able to integrate two sounds with different sources and locations to form a coherent speech percept, and that infants discriminated the two dichotic patterns.
Frequently Asked Questions (8)
Q1. What have the authors contributed in "The faculty of language: what’s special about it?" ?

The authors examine the question of which aspects of language are uniquely human and uniquely linguistic in light of recent suggestions by Hauser, Chomsky, and Fitch that the only such aspect is syntactic recursion, the rest of language being either specific to humans but not to language ( e. g. words and concepts ) or not specific to humans ( e. g. speech perception ). The recursion-only claim, the authors suggest, is motivated by Chomsky ’ s recent approach to syntax, the Minimalist Program, which de-emphasizes the same aspects of language. The approach, however, is sufficiently problematic that it can not be used to support claims about evolution. 2004. 08. 004 * the authors thank Stephen Anderson, Paul Bloom, Susan Carey, Andrew Carstairs-McCarthy, Matt Cartmill, Noam Chomsky, Barbara Citko, Peter Culicover, Dan Dennett, Tecumseh Fitch, Randy Gallistel, David Geary, Tim German, Henry Gleitman, Lila Gleitman, Adele Goldberg, Marc Hauser, Greg Hickok, David Kemmerer, Patricia Kuhl, Shalom Lappin, Philip Lieberman, Alec Marantz, Martin Nowak, Paul Postal, Robert Provine, Robert Remez, Ben Shenoy, Elizabeth Spelke, Lynn Stein, J. D. Trout, Athena Vouloumanos, and Cognition referees for helpful comments and discussion. And it is weakened by experiments suggesting that speech perception can not be reduced to primate audition, that word learning can not be reduced to fact learning, and that at least one gene involved in speech and language was evolutionarily selected in the human lineage but is not specific to recursion. 

As noted as early as Hockett (1960), “duality of patterning”—the existence of two levels of rule-governed combinatorial structure, one combining meaningless sounds into morphemes, the other combining meaningful morphemes into words and phrases—is a universal design feature of human language. 

The most fundamental question in the study of the human language faculty is its place in the natural world: what kind of biological system it is, and how it relates to other systems in their own species and others. 

the position that very little is special to language, and that the special bits are minor modifications of other cognitive processes, is one that Chomsky’s strongest critics have counterposed to his for years. 

Turning to the articulatory side of speech, HCF cite two arguments against evolutionary adaptation for language in the human lineage. 

mathematical notation, the set of all palindromes, and an infinity of others), the fact that actual human languages are a minuscule and well-defined subset of recursive languages is unexplained. 

They do so by suggesting that word learning is not specific to language, citing the hypothesis, which they attribute to Bloom (1999) and Markson and Bloom (1997) that “human children may use domain-general mechanisms to acquire and recall words.” 

A recent comparison of the genomes of mice, chimpanzees, and humans turned up a number of genes that are expressed in the development of the auditory system and that have undergone positive selection in the human lineage (Clark et al., 2003).