This textbook explores the ways in which language informs the
structure and function of the human mind, offering a point of
entry into the fascinating territory of cognitive science. Focusing
mainly on syntactic issues, Language in Cognition is a
unique contribution to this burgeoning field of study.
* Guides undergraduate students through the core questions of
linguistics and cognitive science, and provides tools that will
help them think about the field in a structured way
* Uses the study of language and how language informs the
structure and function of the human mind to introduce the major
ideas in modern cognitive science, including its history and
controversies
* Explores questions such as: what does it mean to say that
linguistics is part of the cognitive sciences; how do the core
properties of language compare with the core properties of other
human cognitive abilities such as vision, music, mathematics, and
other mental building blocks; and what is the relationship between
language and thought?
* Includes an indispensable study guide as well as extensive
references to encourage further independent study
Spis treści
Acknowledgments viii
Prologue xi
Part I Ever Since Chomsky 1
1 Mind Matters: Chomsky’s Dangerous Idea 3
2 The Mechanization of the Mind Picture 14
3 How the Mind Grows: From Meno to Noam 41
Part II Unweaving the Sentence 55
4 Mental Chemistry 57
5 The Variety of Linguistic Experience: The Towers of Babel and Pisa 82
6 All Roads Lead to Universal Grammar 95
Part III The Mental Foundations of Behavior 109
7 Making Sense of Meaning: An Instruction Manual 111
8 Wonderful Mental Life: Unthinkable without Language 120
9 Grammar Caught in the Act 133
Part IV Missing Links 147
10 The (Mis)Measure of Mind 149
11 Homo Combinans 163
12 Computational Organology 173
Epilogue 183
Notes 189
Guide to Further Study 211
References 219
Index 242
O autorze
Cedric Boeckx is Research Professor at the Catalan Institute for Advanced Studies (ICREA), and a member of the Center for Theoretical Linguistics at the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona. Most recently he was Associate Professor of Linguistics at Harvard University. He is the author of Islands and Chains (2003), Linguistic Minimalism (2006), Understanding Minimalist Syntax (Wiley-Blackwell, 2007), and Bare Syntax (2008); and the founding co-editor, with Kleanthes K. Grohmann, of the Open Access journal Biolinguistics.