What it Takes to Talk / Nejlevnější knihy
What it Takes to Talk

Kód: 20626632

What it Takes to Talk

Autor Paul Ibbotson

It would be surprising indeed if we were to find that the principles governing [linguistic] phenomena are operative in other cognitive systems, although there might be a certain loose analogies, perhaps in terms of figure and grou ... celý popis

4020


Skladem u dodavatele v malém množství
Odesíláme za 13-16 dnů

Potřebujete více kusů?Máte-li zájem o více kusů, prověřte, prosím, nejprve dostupnost titulu na naši zákaznické podpoře.


Přidat mezi přání

Mohlo by se vám také líbit

Dárkový poukaz: Radost zaručena

Objednat dárkový poukazVíce informací

Více informací o knize What it Takes to Talk

Nákupem získáte 402 bodů

Anotace knihy

It would be surprising indeed if we were to find that the principles governing [linguistic] phenomena are operative in other cognitive systems, although there might be a certain loose analogies, perhaps in terms of figure and ground, or properties of memory, as we see when relevant principles are made explicit. Such examples illustrate...that there is good reason to suppose that the functioning of the language faculty is guided by special principles specific to this domain..." (Chomsky, 1980, p. 44). It has taken nearly 40 years of research to reveal how this influential statement profoundly underestimated the interconnectivity of language with other cognitive systems. For the first time, this book presents a synthesis of studies which have all shown that the developmental trajectory of language is in some important sense contingent on the development of other non-linguistic abilities. The central thesis of this book follows from that research: Language is constructed out of usage events using species-general cognitive mechanisms (e.g., categorization, inhibition, memory, attention) and constrained by a species-unique set of social skills (e.g., communicative intention-reading, cultural learning). For usage-based theories the complexity of language emerges not as a result of a language-specific instinct but through the interaction of cognition and use. (Langacker, 1987, 1991; Croft, 1991; Givo?n, 1995; Tomasello, 2003; Goldberg, 2006; Bybee, 2010). These broad assumptions are in contrast with those of the generativist and structural traditions who analyze language as a self-contained system, and autonomous from the cognitive and social matrix of language use. When we take the dev-cog-ling approach, the degrees of freedom on what generalisations are plausible are massively reduced to such an extent that the traditional, rationalist approach to framing the problem of induction begins to look fundamentally ill posed

Parametry knihy

4020

Oblíbené z jiného soudku



Osobní odběr Praha, Brno a 12903 dalších

Copyright ©2008-24 nejlevnejsi-knihy.cz Všechna práva vyhrazenaSoukromíCookies


Můj účet: Přihlásit se
Všechny knihy světa na jednom místě. Navíc za skvělé ceny.

Nákupní košík ( prázdný )

Vyzvednutí v Zásilkovně
zdarma nad 1 499 Kč.

Nacházíte se: