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Origins of Human Communication (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,273
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Origins of Human Communication (Paperback)
Series: Origins of Human Communication
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A leading expert on evolution and communication presents an
empirically based theory of the evolutionary origins of human
communication that challenges the dominant Chomskian view. Human
communication is grounded in fundamentally cooperative, even
shared, intentions. In this original and provocative account of the
evolutionary origins of human communication, Michael Tomasello
connects the fundamentally cooperative structure of human
communication (initially discovered by Paul Grice) to the
especially cooperative structure of human (as opposed to other
primate) social interaction. Tomasello argues that human
cooperative communication rests on a psychological infrastructure
of shared intentionality (joint attention, common ground), evolved
originally for collaboration and culture more generally. The basic
motives of the infrastructure are helping and sharing: humans
communicate to request help, inform others of things helpfully, and
share attitudes as a way of bonding within the cultural group.
These cooperative motives each created different functional
pressures for conventionalizing grammatical constructions.
Requesting help in the immediate you-and-me and here-and-now, for
example, required very little grammar, but informing and sharing
required increasingly complex grammatical devices. Drawing on
empirical research into gestural and vocal communication by great
apes and human infants (much of it conducted by his own research
team), Tomasello argues further that humans' cooperative
communication emerged first in the natural gestures of pointing and
pantomiming. Conventional communication, first gestural and then
vocal, evolved only after humans already possessed these natural
gestures and their shared intentionality infrastructure along with
skills of cultural learning for creating and passing along jointly
understood communicative conventions. Challenging the Chomskian
view that linguistic knowledge is innate, Tomasello proposes
instead that the most fundamental aspects of uniquely human
communication are biological adaptations for cooperative social
interaction in general and that the purely linguistic dimensions of
human communication are cultural conventions and constructions
created by and passed along within particular cultural groups.
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