Levinson 2013 (L13) argues against the idea that ‘recursion, and especially recursive center-embedding, might be the core domain-specific property of language’ (p. 159), citing crosslinguistic grammatical data and specific corpus studies. L13 offers an alternative: language inherits its recursive properties ‘from the action domain’ (p. 159). We argue that L13’s claims are at best un-warranted and can in many instances be shown to be false. L13’s reasoning is similarly flawed— in particular, the presumption that center-embedding can stand proxy for embedding (and clausal embedding can stand proxy for recursion). Thus, no support remains for its conclusions. Furthermore, though these conclusions are pitched as relevant to specific claims that...
We distinguish three kinds of recursion: Direct Recursion (which delivers a ‘conjunction’ reading), ...
Recursion has been a central feature of syntactic theory in generative grammar since its establishme...
This article argues that common views on the nature of phrase structure rules (finite-state or of a ...
Citing cross-linguistic grammatical data and specific corpus studies, Levinson 2013 (Language 89.1, ...
There has been a recent spate of work on recursion as a central design feature of language and speci...
There has been a recent spate of work on recursion as a central design feature of language. This sho...
It is a truism that conceptual understanding of a hypothesis is required for its empirical investiga...
The relationship between linguistic syntax and action planning is of considerable interest in cognit...
The paper examines the different ways in which the notion of ‘recursion’ has been conceived and def...
Recursion and self-embedding are at the heart of our ability to formulate our thoughts, articulate o...
In the generative tradition, the language faculty has been shrinking—perhaps to include only the mec...
In this chapter I will be concerned with what characterizes human language and the parser that compu...
This paper argues that recursion in language is to be understood not in terms of embedding, but in t...
Abstract. In 2002, Hauser, Chomsky, and Fitch published an article in which they introduced a distin...
Natural recursion in syntax is recursion by linguistic value, which is not syntactic in nature but s...
We distinguish three kinds of recursion: Direct Recursion (which delivers a ‘conjunction’ reading), ...
Recursion has been a central feature of syntactic theory in generative grammar since its establishme...
This article argues that common views on the nature of phrase structure rules (finite-state or of a ...
Citing cross-linguistic grammatical data and specific corpus studies, Levinson 2013 (Language 89.1, ...
There has been a recent spate of work on recursion as a central design feature of language and speci...
There has been a recent spate of work on recursion as a central design feature of language. This sho...
It is a truism that conceptual understanding of a hypothesis is required for its empirical investiga...
The relationship between linguistic syntax and action planning is of considerable interest in cognit...
The paper examines the different ways in which the notion of ‘recursion’ has been conceived and def...
Recursion and self-embedding are at the heart of our ability to formulate our thoughts, articulate o...
In the generative tradition, the language faculty has been shrinking—perhaps to include only the mec...
In this chapter I will be concerned with what characterizes human language and the parser that compu...
This paper argues that recursion in language is to be understood not in terms of embedding, but in t...
Abstract. In 2002, Hauser, Chomsky, and Fitch published an article in which they introduced a distin...
Natural recursion in syntax is recursion by linguistic value, which is not syntactic in nature but s...
We distinguish three kinds of recursion: Direct Recursion (which delivers a ‘conjunction’ reading), ...
Recursion has been a central feature of syntactic theory in generative grammar since its establishme...
This article argues that common views on the nature of phrase structure rules (finite-state or of a ...