Noam Chomsky has made major contributions to three fields:
political history and analysis, linguistics, and the philosophies
of mind, language, and human nature. In this thoroughly revised and
updated volume, James Mc Gilvray provides a critical introduction to
Chomsky’s work in these three key areas and assesses their
continuing importance and relevance for today.
In an incisive and comprehensive analysis, Mc Gilvray argues that
Chomsky’s work can be seen as a unified intellectual project.
He shows how Chomsky adapts the tools of natural science to the
study of mind and of language in particular and explains why
Chomsky’s ‘rationalist’ approach to the mind continues to be
opposed by the majority of contemporary cognitive scientists. The
book also discusses some of Chomsky’s central political
themes in depth, examining how Chomsky’s view of the good life and
the ideal form of social organization is related to and in part
dependent on his biologically based account of human nature and the
place of language within it. As in the first edition, Mc Gilvray
emphasizes the distinction between common sense and science and the
difference between rationalist and empiricist approaches to the
mind, making clear the importance of these themes for understanding
Chomsky’s work and showing that they are based on elementary
observations that are accessible to everyone. This edition has been
extensively re-written to emphasize Chomsky’s recent work, which
increasingly ‘biologizes’ the study of language and mind and – by
implication – the study of human nature.
This book will be of interest to students and scholars of
philosophy, linguistics, and politics, as well as to all those keen
to develop a critical understanding of one of the most
controversial and important thinkers writing today.
Tabla de materias
Preface vi
Introduction 1
1 Chomsky’s Contributions 7
2 The Mind and Its Sciences 26
3 Partitioning the Mind: Bad and Good Cognitive Science 52
4 Human Problem-Solving Capacities 69
5 The Science of Language 89
6 Linguistic Meanings and Their Uses 136
7 Chomsky on Politics: Some Basic Themes 158
8 Language and Politics: Justification 205
Glossary 234
Notes 238
Bibliography 245
Index 254
Sobre el autor
James Mc Gilvray is Associate Professor in the Department of Philosophy at Mc Gill University in Canada.