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core knowledge of
detecting sentences
The turnip of shapely knowing isn't yet buttressed by death.
*The buttressed turnip shapely knowing yet isn't of by death.
transforming sentences
That is the tiger who is my friend.
The tiger who is my friend is eating all the food.
Is that the tiger who is your friend?
Is the tiger who is your friend eating all the food?
core knowledge of syntax is innate ?
We know that ‘implicit statistical learning is implicated’ (Kidd, 2012, p. 180).
But does learning syntax also ever depend on innate capacties?
‘There would seem not to be enough ambient information available to account for the functional architecture that minds are found to have’ (Fodor, 1983, p. 35).
the red ball
‘I’ll play with this red ball and you can play with that one.’
Lidz et al (2003)
infants?
Look, a yellow bottle! | control: What do you see now? test: Do you see another one? | |
[yellow bottle] | [yellow bottle] | [blue bottle] |
Lidz et al (2003)
Lidz et al (2003, figure 1)
From 18 months of age or earlier, infants represent the syntax of noun phrases in much the way adults do.
But are these representations innate?
Poverty of stimulus argument
compare Pullum & Scholz 2002, p. 18
‘the APS [argument from the poverty of stimulus] still awaits even a single good supporting example’
Pullum & Scholz 2002, p. 47
What is innate in humans?
‘Universal Grammar is [...] is the prespecification in the brain that permits the learning of language to take place. So the grammar-acquiring capacity is what Chomsky claims is innate’
(Jackendoff, 2003, p. 72).
‘Universal Grammar [...] must [...] prespecify the possibilities for derivational rules (if any) and for constraints in syntax, not to mention many important facets of phonological structure’
(Jackendoff, 2003, p. 78).
Innateness / Syntax Conclusions
development as (re)discovery
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