This paper attempts to show the real nature of Universal Grammar. Universal grammar is separate part of human mind which makes language learning possible and generative. Universal grammar is the symbolic and systematic rules inside our mind. These rules help us to classify, analyze, differentiate, assimilate, understand and recognize human language. This paper determines the real nature of philosophical grammar and discusses the modular and non-modular approach of it. I shall examine the critical approaches of Wittgenstein and Chomsky and their comparison to investigate the philosophical grammar
In his Wittgenstein on Rules and Private Language, Saul Kripke presents his influential reading of W...
The paper elucidates Wittgenstein's later conception of philosophy as devoid of theories or theses, ...
The first part of this paper discusses the rationale for universal grammar (UG) theory to explain fi...
This paper attempts to show the real nature of Universal Grammar. Universal grammar is se...
This chapter offers an overview of the history of philosophical, or universal, or general grammar, i...
The paper overviews the evolution of the views on Universal Grammar in Chomsky’s generative theory o...
This thesis examines the notion of ‘grammar’ and, in particular, the notion of ‘rules of grammar’ in...
In Wittgenstein's philosophy grammar is the conceptual order, suggested by our language. The rules o...
Chomsky in recent years has made explicit what he believes is the best-grounded and richest naturali...
This paper tries to determine the philosophical nature of language, its functions, structure and con...
In this paper, a formal theory is presented that describes syntactic and semantic mechanisms of phil...
Of all the human sciences, linguistics has had perhaps the most success in pivoting itself towards t...
“Universal Grammar” or UG has been a popular term since the early 1980s, or more precisely since the...
It is an old observation that all languages, despite apparent differences on surface level, seem to ...
The most controversial aspect of generative grammar of Chomsky was a hypothesis that humans have a s...
In his Wittgenstein on Rules and Private Language, Saul Kripke presents his influential reading of W...
The paper elucidates Wittgenstein's later conception of philosophy as devoid of theories or theses, ...
The first part of this paper discusses the rationale for universal grammar (UG) theory to explain fi...
This paper attempts to show the real nature of Universal Grammar. Universal grammar is se...
This chapter offers an overview of the history of philosophical, or universal, or general grammar, i...
The paper overviews the evolution of the views on Universal Grammar in Chomsky’s generative theory o...
This thesis examines the notion of ‘grammar’ and, in particular, the notion of ‘rules of grammar’ in...
In Wittgenstein's philosophy grammar is the conceptual order, suggested by our language. The rules o...
Chomsky in recent years has made explicit what he believes is the best-grounded and richest naturali...
This paper tries to determine the philosophical nature of language, its functions, structure and con...
In this paper, a formal theory is presented that describes syntactic and semantic mechanisms of phil...
Of all the human sciences, linguistics has had perhaps the most success in pivoting itself towards t...
“Universal Grammar” or UG has been a popular term since the early 1980s, or more precisely since the...
It is an old observation that all languages, despite apparent differences on surface level, seem to ...
The most controversial aspect of generative grammar of Chomsky was a hypothesis that humans have a s...
In his Wittgenstein on Rules and Private Language, Saul Kripke presents his influential reading of W...
The paper elucidates Wittgenstein's later conception of philosophy as devoid of theories or theses, ...
The first part of this paper discusses the rationale for universal grammar (UG) theory to explain fi...