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Universal Grammar and the Mind vs the Brain

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1 Universal Grammar and the Mind vs the Brain
Elly van Gelderen 6 April 2012

2 Outline Some current developments regarding Universal Grammar (UG):
What is (UG) and what is 3rd factor? Status of features Mind over matter: can linguistics contribute to the renewed interest in dualism?

3 Some current issues in Minimalism
How much to attribute to Universal Grammar? Earlier: parameters in the syntax (e.g. head-initial) but now all variation is in the lexicon by means of features; syntax is `merge’ Lexical learning and the Poverty of the Stimulus suggest the need for innate concepts

4 From early Generative Grammar to Minimalism
Universal Grammar UG and Third factors (= Principles & Parameters) Input Input (Scottish English, Western Navajo, etc) = = I-language I-language E-language E-Language

5 Three Factors relevant to the FL
“(1) genetic endowment, which sets limits on the attainable languages, thereby making language acquisition possible; (2) external data, converted to the experience that selects one or another language within a narrow range; (3) principles not specific to FL [the Faculty of Language]. Some of the third factor principles have the flavor of the constraints that enter into all facets of growth and evolution.... Among these are principles of efficient computation”. (Chomsky 2007: 3)

6 The actual features are not third factor
Chomsky (1965: 142): “semantic features ... too, are presumably drawn from a universal ‘alphabet’ but little is known about this today and nothing has been said about it here.” Chomsky (1993: 24) vocabulary acquisition shows poverty of the stimulus.

7 The importance of various features
Chomsky (1965: 87-88): lexicon contains information for the phonological, semantic, and syntactic component. Sincerity (+N, -Count, +Abstract...) Chomsky (1995: 230ff; 236; 277ff): semantic (e.g. abstract object), phonological (e.g. the sounds), and formal features: intrinsic or optional.

8 Features of airplane and build (adapted from Chomsky 1995: 231)
Semantic would be innate; formal needs to be learned! airplane build semantic: e.g. [artifact] e.g. [action] phonological: e.g. [begins with a vowel; e.g. [one syllable] two syllables] formal: intrinsic optional intrinsic optional [nominal] [number] [verbal] [phi] [3 person] [Case] [assign accusative] [tense] [non-human]

9 Categories/semantic features
Humans and non-humans are excellent at categorization, e.g. prairie dogs have colors, shape, size. Words are not the problem; morphology is!

10 Innate vs learned shapes grammatical gender
negatives grammatical number `if’ modals mass-count Another question: much more speculative!

11 Free will vs determinism
“Les idées ... ne tirent en aucune sorte leur origine des sens ... Notre ame a la faculté de les former de soi-même.” `Ideas do not in any fashion have their origin in the senses ... Our mind has the faculty to form those on its own.’ (Arnauld & Nicole 1662 [1965]: 45) Language is about the mind not the world!

12 Is the `mind’ purely material?
De la Mettrie Descartes Skinner Eccles/Popper Churchland Sperry (mentalism) Dennett Chalmers Consciousness and subjectivity? The problem of reference: unicorn, circle The mind thinks about that which is not; we can’t know what others think.

13 For Baker (2011) FL is an ideal testing ground
Vocabulary and grammar vs creative aspect (CALU). CALU: unbounded, stimulus-free, and appropriate use. a) Is there an area in the brain for CALU? Wernicke and Broca’s aphasia: no evidence that CALU is affected. Lichtheim (1885): no aphasia with concept center affected. b) Is there a CALU gene? c) OCD therapy (Schwarz): mind tells the brain to stop

14 In short Recent changes in what UG is:
from Principles and Parameters > features Now the question is: are concepts and features innate and third factor? New focus: CALU and dualism


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