This article, in its first part, summarizes Noam Chomsky’s ideas about human nature and their ethico-political consequences, language and its origin and the scope and limitations of experimental science. As a result, there will emerge the portrait of a great scientist without prejudices and a true and honest freethinker. Then, on the second part, and based on the author C. S. Lewis, a proposal will be made about the possible existence of an infused rational soul in humans and how it could connect with the linguist’s ideas with respect to the origin of language. It will also serve to supply with some realism Chomsky’s too optimistic view about human nature.</span
Two kinds of theories have dominated recent discussion of the origin of language (see Pinker & B...
The paper is a discussion of Charles Taylor’s recent book The Language Animal. The criticism of Tayl...
The aim of the present work is to identify the evolutionary origins of the ability to speak and unde...
Fifty years ago, Noam Chomsky laid the foundations for a new scientific approach to the human langua...
I explore Chomsky's naturalistic stance in cognitive science, his internalism in semantics and his a...
Chomsky’s view that much of one’s knowledge of a natural language is innate has dominated theorizing...
Abstract: Noam Chomsky incarnates rationalism in the study of language like no other man has or does...
DISCUSSION PAPER: HARNAD: Let me just ask a question which everyone else...
Abstract: The Chomskyan revolution in linguistics in the 1950s in essence turned linguistics into a ...
The article contains a critical review of modern problems of Universal Grammar theory by Noam Choms...
Once someone hits upon a good idea, others can learn it from them with ease, and develop it further....
The paper reviews the role of Noam Chomsky in the conceptual changes in modern psychology that are d...
fathers of two research fields which are known respectively as Biosemiotics and Biolinguistics and w...
REVIEW OF: The Symbolic Species - The co-evolution of language and the human brain, by Terrence Deac...
My major aim in this paper is to discuss whether the property of recursion provides a good explanati...
Two kinds of theories have dominated recent discussion of the origin of language (see Pinker & B...
The paper is a discussion of Charles Taylor’s recent book The Language Animal. The criticism of Tayl...
The aim of the present work is to identify the evolutionary origins of the ability to speak and unde...
Fifty years ago, Noam Chomsky laid the foundations for a new scientific approach to the human langua...
I explore Chomsky's naturalistic stance in cognitive science, his internalism in semantics and his a...
Chomsky’s view that much of one’s knowledge of a natural language is innate has dominated theorizing...
Abstract: Noam Chomsky incarnates rationalism in the study of language like no other man has or does...
DISCUSSION PAPER: HARNAD: Let me just ask a question which everyone else...
Abstract: The Chomskyan revolution in linguistics in the 1950s in essence turned linguistics into a ...
The article contains a critical review of modern problems of Universal Grammar theory by Noam Choms...
Once someone hits upon a good idea, others can learn it from them with ease, and develop it further....
The paper reviews the role of Noam Chomsky in the conceptual changes in modern psychology that are d...
fathers of two research fields which are known respectively as Biosemiotics and Biolinguistics and w...
REVIEW OF: The Symbolic Species - The co-evolution of language and the human brain, by Terrence Deac...
My major aim in this paper is to discuss whether the property of recursion provides a good explanati...
Two kinds of theories have dominated recent discussion of the origin of language (see Pinker & B...
The paper is a discussion of Charles Taylor’s recent book The Language Animal. The criticism of Tayl...
The aim of the present work is to identify the evolutionary origins of the ability to speak and unde...