Description
Book SynopsisHow does human language contribute to the cognitive edge humans have over other species? Incorporating research results in psychology, the author develops an original account of language acquisition which holds important implications for standard theories of language and the philosophical foundations of cognitive science.
Trade Review"Rita Nolan successfully criticizes ideas -among them, Fodor's 'language of thought' model and Chomsky's 'innateness hypothesis' -that have dominated cognitive psychology and linguistics for decades. But this is much more than a critical book, valuable as good philosophical criticism always is; with a remarkable combination of philosophical imagination and breadth of knowledge, she illuminates the entire area of philosophy and psychology of language. The social practice account of language that she proposes sheds light on a host of topics (including the philosophy of the earlier and the later Wittgenstein), and it leads her to suggest a novel but highly plausible reconceptualization of the development of logical and linguistic skills in the child that will fascinate psychologists as well as philosophers."
Hilary Putnam, Harvard UniversityTable of ContentsPreface.
Introduction.
Part I: Language and Cognitive Dynamics:.
1. The Question.
2. Language Realism.
3. Cognitive Dynamics.
4. Society and Language.
5. Desiderata for a Theory of Language.
6. The Standard Theory.
7. Foci for Revision.
Part II: The Code Metaphor for Languages:.
8. The Semantic Content of the Code Metaphor.
9. Referential Semantics: Breaking the Code?.
10. The New Code Theory.
11. Mature Competency and Language Learning.
Part III: Language Entry:.
12. Linguistic Constructionalism.
13. The Fallacy of Linguistic Supervenience.
14. Semantic Theory and Language Learning.
15. Reconceptualizing Language Acquisition.
16. How Long Does it Take?.
17. Superordination.
18. The Cognitive Import of Superordination.
19. The Categorical Structure of Discourse.
20. Conclusion.
Part IV: Society in Mind:.
21. The Superordination Hypothesis.
22. Unavailable Routes to Language Entry.
23. Two Questions.
24. Interpreting Early Speech.
25. Early Syntax.
26. But What Is Predication?.
Part V: From Response to Assertion:.
27. Is There a Transition from Response to Assertion.
28. Subjects and Predicates.
29. Formal Approaches to Predication.
30. Sensation, Perception, Conception and Judgement.
31. Categories of Perception, Categories of Conception.
32. The Generality Constraint.
33. Developmental Data.
34. From Perceptual Categories to Conceptual Categories.
35. The Emergence of Predication.
36. Some Consequences of "Thick" Superordination.
Part VI: Discursive Practices:.
37. Mutant Predicates.
38. Conceptual Structures.
39. Towards a Topology of Concepts.
40. Conceptual Structures.
41. Meaning as Analogical.
42. Discourse Genres.
43. Non-Gricean Pragmatists.
44. Socially Contingent Phenomena.
45. The Attitudes as Socially Contingent.
46. Substructural Indeterminacy.
References.
Index.