Journal Article10.1017/S0140525X00081061
Natural language and natural selection
Steven Pinker,Paul Bloom +1 more
TL;DR: There is every reason to believe that a specialization for grammar evolved by a conventional neo-Darwinian process, as well as other arguments and data.
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Abstract: Many people have argued that the evolution of the human language faculty cannot be explained by Darwinian natural selection. Chomsky and Gould have suggested that language may have evolved as the by-product of selection for other abilities or as a consequence of as-yet unknown laws of growth and form. Others have argued that a biological specialization for grammar is incompatible with every tenet of Darwinian theory – that it shows no genetic variation, could not exist in any intermediate forms, confers no selective advantage, and would require more evolutionary time and genomic space than is available. We examine these arguments and show that they depend on inaccurate assumptions about biology or language or both. Evolutionary theory offers clear criteria for when a trait should be attributed to natural selection: complex design for some function, and the absence of alternative processes capable of explaining such complexity. Human language meets these criteria: Grammar is a complex mechanism tailored to the transmission of propositional structures through a serial interface. Autonomous and arbitrary grammatical phenomena have been offered as counterexamples to the position that language is an adaptation, but this reasoning is unsound: Communication protocols depend on arbitrary conventions that are adaptive as long as they are shared. Consequently, language acquisition in the child should systematically differ from language evolution in the species, and attempts to analogize them are misleading. Reviewing other arguments and data, we conclude that there is every reason to believe that a specialization for grammar evolved by a conventional neo-Darwinian process.
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Cognition in context: Evidence on affordances and verbal language
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated affordance and verbal language to demonstrate the flexibility of embodied simulation processes, and reported conceptual effects confirm that the context plays a crucial role in affordances emergence, metaphoric mappings activation and language grounding.
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TL;DR: A review on multi-agent language-games modelling of language emergence and evolution can be found in this article , where a promising approach considers language as a collective phenomenon, which emerges in a population of communicating agents.
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Neo-Darwinian accounts of the evolution of language: 1. Questions about their explanatory focus
Rudolf P. Botha
- 01 Dec 2012
TL;DR: The neo-Darwinian theory of natural selection, it is generally considered, offers the only adequate conceptual framework for explaining the evolution of complex biological structures as mentioned in this paper, and thus it is not really surprising that an increasing volume of work is aimed at constructing nea-darwinian selectionist accounts of language in the human species.
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