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The chapters in this volume are the result of a series of Cognitive
Sciences Workshops held at McGill University. Each workshop was
organized around a different theme and each of these topics is
represented in the volume: language acquisition and development;
text and text processing; computer chess; grammars, parsers, and
language comprehension; scientific reasoning and problem solving;
language and the brain; and semantics. The topics are approached
from the perspectives of linguistics, psychology, philosophy,
computer science, and neurology.
First published in 1987. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor and
Francis, an informa company.
First published in 1987. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
Is language somehow innate in the structure of the human brain, or
is it completely learned? This debate is still at the heart of
linguistics, especially as it intersects with psychology and
cognitive science. In collecting papers which discuss the evidence
and arguments regarding this difficult question, The Inheritance
and Innateness of Grammars considers cases ranging from infants who
are just beginning to learn the properties of a native language to
language-impaired adults who will never learn one. These studies
show that, while precursors of language exist in other creatures,
the abilities necessary for constructing full-fledged grammars are
part of the biological endowment of human beings. The essays that
comprise this volume test the range and specificity of that
endowment, while also contributing to our understanding of the
intricate and complex relationship between language and biology.
This volume, the sixth in the Vancouver series based on an annual conference at Simon Fraser University, collects papers that discuss the evidence and arguments regarding the inheritability and innateness of grammars. The evidence - which ranges from babies who are just beginning to learn the properties of their native language, to language-impaired adults who will never learn it - converges to show that whole precursors of language exist in other creatures, the abilities necessary for constructing fully fledged grammars are part of the biological endowment of human beings.
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