This new four-volume collection, part of Routledge s Critical
Concepts in Linguistics series, assembles the most important
scholarly writings concerning the biological evolution of language,
particularly those incorporating a Darwinian view of evolution.
Including excerpts from ancient sources such as the Bible, Plato,
and Aristotle, along with classical sources like Condillac,
Rousseau, and Herder, Language Evolution provides an overview of
the intensive debate on language evolution following the
publication of Darwin s Origin of Species.
It also outlines each of the major conceptions of protolanguage
and examines the evolution of our human capacity for speech, as
well as focusing on the modern (mostly post-1990) literature
attempting to reconcile the Chomskyean approach to linguistics with
a Darwinian evolutionary viewpoint. In addition, it incorporates
the new insights and approaches based on computer modelling, which
have played a growing role in the recent literature.
This is an important resource for those scholars interested in
possessing a deeper, historically informed overview of the immense
literature on this topic. The collection will also, of course,
provide unified and ready access to a selection of the most
important papers from the 1990s onward. It is supplemented with a
full index, and includes an introduction to each volume, newly
written by the editors, which places the assembled materials in
their historical and intellectual context.
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