Book Cover
Book
Author Sampson, Geoffrey.

Title Educating Eve : the "language instinct" debate / Geoffrey Sampson
Published London ; Washington, D.C. : Cassell, 1997

Copies

Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 MELB  401 Sam/Eet  AVAILABLE
Description 184 pages ; 25 cm
Series Open linguistics series
Open linguistics series.
Contents 1. Culture or Biology? -- 2. The Original Arguments for a Language Instinct -- 3. The Debate Renewed -- 4. Language Structure Turns Queen's Evidence -- 5. The Creative Mind -- 6. Conclusion
Summary A different picture of learning is suggested by Karl Popper's account of knowledge growing through 'conjectures and refutations'. The facts of human language are best explained by taking language acquisition to be a case of Popperian learning
Are we creatures who learn new things? Or does human mental development consist of awakening instinctive structures of thought? A view has gained ground that language in much of its detail is hard-wired in our genes. Others add that this also holds true for much of the specific knowledge and understanding expressed in language. When the first human Eve evolved from pre-human apes (it is claimed), her biological inheritance comprised not just a distinctive anatomy but a rich structure of cognition. Despite the impressive roll of converts which these ideas have gained, there is no good reason to believe them. The arguments of Pinker and others depend on earlier and more technical contributions, by writers such as Noam Chomsky. Many readers take these foundations on trust, not realizing how weak they are. This book examines the various arguments for instinctive knowledge, and finds that each one rests on false premises or embodies a logical fallacy
Analysis Creativity (Linguistics)
Innateness hypothesis (Linguistics)
Language and languages -- Philosophy
Notes Includes index
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages [163]-179) and index
Subject Creativity (Linguistics)
Innateness hypothesis (Linguistics)
Language and languages -- Philosophy.
LC no. 97002322
ISBN 0304339083