Notions like ‘biolinguistics’ have a trivial and a non-trivial interpretation. According to the trivial version, a cultural phenomenon like language is only based on our innate biological capacities. Language, in this view, is not a matter of biology per se but of applied biology, i.e. a form of technology. Under this interpretation, ‘biolinguistics’ is uncontroversial and trivial because all our cultural activities are grounded in our biology. According to the non-trivial interpretation, the concept of language can be sufficiently narrowly construed so that we can define a core capacity that is comparable to a biological organ (like the heart or the liver). Recently, it has become common to see this ‘faculty of language in the narrow sense...
Seen from the perspective of a biologist, the issue of the origin of language contains an inherent a...
1 Language: internal or external? Although language uncontroversially has internal, psychological di...
Conventionally understood as the interface between us (humans) and the ‘out there’, this article pro...
Notions like ‘biolinguistics’ have a trivial and a non-trivial interpretation. According to the triv...
The paper shows the inadequacy of the structuralist method with its climax in generative grammar met...
This paper discusses the widely held idea that the building blocks of languages (features, categorie...
The creative aspect of language use provides a set of phenomena that a science of language must expl...
The creative aspect of language use provides a set of phenomena that a science of language must expl...
In contrast to what has happened in other sciences, the establishment of what is the study object of...
This talk makes the case that language is not innate, that there is no language instinct, and that t...
We examine the question of which aspects of language are uniquely human and uniquely linguistic in l...
Language defines human existence. Yet defining language is a fraught project. I use the te...
The creative aspect of language use provides a set of phenomena that a science of language must expl...
In contrast to what has happened in other sciences, the establishment of what is the study object of...
Language is a symbiotic organism. Language is neither an organ, nor is it an instinct. In the past t...
Seen from the perspective of a biologist, the issue of the origin of language contains an inherent a...
1 Language: internal or external? Although language uncontroversially has internal, psychological di...
Conventionally understood as the interface between us (humans) and the ‘out there’, this article pro...
Notions like ‘biolinguistics’ have a trivial and a non-trivial interpretation. According to the triv...
The paper shows the inadequacy of the structuralist method with its climax in generative grammar met...
This paper discusses the widely held idea that the building blocks of languages (features, categorie...
The creative aspect of language use provides a set of phenomena that a science of language must expl...
The creative aspect of language use provides a set of phenomena that a science of language must expl...
In contrast to what has happened in other sciences, the establishment of what is the study object of...
This talk makes the case that language is not innate, that there is no language instinct, and that t...
We examine the question of which aspects of language are uniquely human and uniquely linguistic in l...
Language defines human existence. Yet defining language is a fraught project. I use the te...
The creative aspect of language use provides a set of phenomena that a science of language must expl...
In contrast to what has happened in other sciences, the establishment of what is the study object of...
Language is a symbiotic organism. Language is neither an organ, nor is it an instinct. In the past t...
Seen from the perspective of a biologist, the issue of the origin of language contains an inherent a...
1 Language: internal or external? Although language uncontroversially has internal, psychological di...
Conventionally understood as the interface between us (humans) and the ‘out there’, this article pro...