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The Biolinguistic Enterprise:New Perspectives on the Evolution and Nature of the Human Language Faculty

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Anna Maria Di Sciullo, Cedric Boeckx
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Oxford University Press, Mar 17, 2011 - Language Arts & Disciplines - 576 pages
This book, by leading scholars, represents some of the main work in progress in biolinguistics. It offers fresh perspectives on language evolution and variation, new developments in theoretical linguistics, and insights on the relations between variation in language and variation in biology. The authors address the Darwinian questions on the origin and evolution of language from a minimalist perspective, and provide elegant solutions to the evolutionary gap between human languageand communication in all other organisms. They consider language variation in the context of current biological approaches to species diversity - the 'evo-devo revolution' - which bring to light deep homologies between organisms. In dispensing with the classical notion of syntactic parameters, theauthors argue that language variation, like biodiversity, is the result of experience and thus not a part of the language faculty in the narrow sense. They also examine the nature of this core language faculty, the primary categories with which it is concerned, the operations it performs, the syntactic constraints it poses on semantic interpretation and the role of phases in bridging the gap between brain and syntax. Written in language accessible to a wide audience, The BiolinguisticEnterprise will appeal to scholars and students of linguistics, cognitive science, biology, and natural language processing.
  

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Contents

10Approaching Parameters from Below
Havebe Alternations in the Present Perfect
ii
12The Biolinguistic Program and Historical Reconstruction
ii
13A Biolinguistic Approach to Variation
ii
Part IIIComputation
iii
14Antisymmetry and the Lexicon
iv
15What Kind of Computing Device is the Human Language Faculty?
xxxv
16Clauses Propositions and Phases
li

The Case of FOXP2
Genetics and Dynamics
7Deep Homology in the Biology and Evolution of Language
Part IIVariation
8The Three Design Factors in Evolution and Variation
9Three Factors in Language Variation
On the Syntactic Representation of Indexicality
lxxxv
18Emergence of a Systemic Semantics through Minimal and Underspecified Codes
cxviii
A Case for a Role of the Phonological Loop
cli
Biology Computation and Language from the Bottom Up
clxxxiii
References
1978
Index
2006

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