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Foundations of Language: Brain, Meaning, Grammar, Evolution

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Already hailed as a masterpiece, Foundations of Language offers a brilliant overhaul of the last thirty-five years of research in generative linguistics and related fields. "Few books really deserve the cliche 'this should be read by every researcher in the field, '" writes Steven Pinker, author of The Language Instinct, "But Ray Jackendoff's Foundations of Language does."
Foundations of Language offers a radically new understanding of how language, the brain, and perception intermesh. The book renews the promise of early generative linguistics: that language can be a valuable entree into understanding the human mind and brain. The approach is remarkably interdisciplinary. Behind its innovations is Jackendoff's fundamental proposal that the creativity of language derives from multiple parallel generative systems linked by interface components. This shift in basic architecture makes possible a radical reconception of mental grammar and how it is learned. As a consequence, Jackendoff is able to reintegrate linguistics with philosophy of mind, cognitive and developmental psychology, evolutionary biology, neuroscience, and computational linguistics. Among the major topics treated are language processing, the relation of language to perception, the innateness of language, and the evolution of the language capacity, as well as more standard issues in linguistic theory such as the roles of syntax and the lexicon. In addition, Jackendoff offers a sophisticated theory of semantics that incorporates insights from philosophy of language, logic and formal semantics, lexical semantics of various stripes, cognitive grammar, psycholinguistic and neurolinguistic approaches, and the author's own conceptual semantics.
Here then is the most fundamental contribution to linguistic theory in over three decades.
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477 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2002

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Ray S. Jackendoff

17 books34 followers

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5 stars
60 (37%)
4 stars
61 (37%)
3 stars
31 (19%)
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5 (3%)
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Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews
Profile Image for Kevin.
186 reviews16 followers
October 13, 2011
clearly ahead of himself, jackendoff uses English primarily in example of his thesis (which is actually a thesis made of multiples, when morphology is explored it has so many alternates that it seems almost an entire argument against himself). he rarely uses spoken languages (languages that never used written form), rarely uses diversions from English's structuring (Turkish is used infrequently), rarely uses 'dead' languages, never uses pictogram-languages (Chinese) and never glyphic (Maya). while he successfully challenges the Lakoff/Johnson proposal regarding metaphor, he subsumes his book in fragments and directions flowing through morphology, semantics, syntax, evolving Chomsky while trying to posit a neural connection between 'grammar' and phoneme, yet he never makes a successful return to spatial, he never tries to explore how speech is not merely spatial in what it 'describes' but that it must be first and foremost a spatial mirror of what the brain's inner sees in the outer. spoken language is window dressing for more complete memories that are stored in spatial parameters (but not using a visual picture). Spatial remains the book's visible failure, relegated to a bottom of the book's first and elemental figure (1.1). A colossal ascent and a very fast drop into the abyss of knowledge. Jackendoff's unmentioned pre-introductory reasoning seems to be, we use these spoken/written tools, they must form a collective lens into brain structure. Perversely he uses a western ideogram, an image of a very linear metaphor, a tree, and a five-pointed star to illustrate his poorly developed neural argument. The spectre of Sapir-Whorff haunts this book, it's a ghost Jackendoof can't shake no matter how many Generatives he dispels. Be wary of linguists offering lenses into the brain.
477 reviews35 followers
October 29, 2019
The four star rating reflects the fact that large swathes of this book were too bound up within the complex world of linguistics for me to understand them. I'm inclined to think I would appreciate them if I had more familiarity with the field, but I did have some concerns about Jackendoff presupposing too much about what we can say the structures of the brain consist of. Very low certainty on that judgment though. The parts I did understand, which emerged at random in most chapters but came to a head in the chapters on evolutionary development, foundations of mentalistic semantics, and truth and reference, were brilliant. By far the most complex and nuanced account of the development of language and how to think of its relationship to thought I have encountered. It seems to fit in well with and expand on the theories of language suggested by the works of Dennett/Carruthers I really enjoyed. The mentalist theories of truth/reference strike me as right on track, especially with the more Kantian/PP frameworks I've felt more inclined to recently. That being said, my actual knowledge of this field still feels very limited, so I definitely need to read the criticisms of this work and alternative views more. I guess the other big question this book leaves me with is where research should be directed from here? Is the most meaningful hope for progress just better brain-imaging technology, or is there more room for theoretical/experimental insight? I'm not sure. The questions this book touches on feel so important to understanding the nature of human though, creativity, and what it would take to build AI, but this book also made me realize the amount of technical work and slogging through detail necessary to realize those aspirations, so I'm unsure how much deeper I want to go in these areas. Anyway, hard going in many parts but the peaks made it well worth it. Maybe I will look into the more popular-oriented book he wrote a few years ago.
Profile Image for Bookish Hedgehog.
114 reviews
September 25, 2021
I wish I read this book before beginning my undergraduate degree; despite its publication date (2002), Jackendoff's arguments have lost no force. He succeeds with elegance in making an excellent case for consilience among competing frameworks and disciplines by offering a parallel architecture -- one that rightly ascribes a non-negotiable status to mentalist theorising and maintains a very loyal commitment to empirical detail through and through.

In fact, I shot him an email, asking if he is still open to accepting new mentees, but the man seems to have retired. Yet, this richly cited work should be a brilliant starting point for anyone who wishes to advance a naturalistic take on language, and do so without giving up on the generative grammar project.

I know, so far, it's just uncritical acclaim. Jackendoff's case is, after all, not faultless; but, I want to take a break and explore a little more before writing a more informed and critical review here...
Profile Image for Drew.
25 reviews2 followers
November 12, 2009
Jackendoff has created a provocative masterpiece in this exploration of the theories and current problems in cognitive and neurological grammar and its insight into the nature of language and thought. His survey of the linguistic theoretical landscape is thorough and nuanced and he adds his own cogent hypotheses when he finds the philosophical framework lacking. His approach to the problems of assigning truth-value to linguistic utterances as proposed by Gottlob Frege in On Sense and Reference and the locus of idiomatic grammar rules in the mind are particularly interesting.

Frege's model of determining the veracity of statements made with language has the advantage of being philosophically rigorous and appealing to a first-order level of intuition. However, because it insists that linguistic structures in the mind (that subsequently become communicated outward through speech and the written word) refer inherently to a state of affairs "in the world," his theory cannot articulate nor determine the veracity of statements about possibility or about imaginary events. To ascertain whether the phrase "it might rain today" is true, or what its being true even means is outside the power of his theory. Likewise, weighing the veracity of the statement, "Luke is the son of Darth Vader," is equally ambiguous. Jackendoff proposes that linguistic constructions "refer" not to a state of affairs in the world around us, but to a perceptual instantiation inside our own mind. This percept, as he calls it, can be the result of physical stimuli upon our nervous system, an extrapolation of that stimuli (as when we "see" something in the shadows), or generated within mind itself as through conscious imagining or nocturnal dreaming. What it means for a linguistic utterance to be true, now being decoupled from its conflation with reference, can be readdressed with fresh philosophical arguments. Jackendoff suggests that language is useful if it allows for two parties to share their notions of their own internal percepts in such a way as to cooperate together in a mutually beneficial fashion. Whether their percepts are identical or not is irrelevant for that task.

Jackendoff is a proponent of the Chomskyan-generated theoretical structure that suggests there exists within the human brain a neurologically hardwired grammar repository; that there is an innate ability to understand, recognize, and work within the set of syntactic relationships among words found in natural human languages. Chomsky desired to make all such relationships hardwired or derived from prior syntactic rules by hardwired derivation processes. The problem with this approach is that the logical contortions needed to arrive at certain idiomatic constructions defy our intuitions about grammar and language and our experience in learning those constructions. Jackendoff seeks to remedy this inelegancy by suggesting that the regular, common features of grammar are indeed hardwired into our brains, but that the exceptions and idiomatic constructions that are found throughout natural languages are not subtle logical derivations from the baseline syntactic regularity; rather, each lexical item needing unique syntactic consideration has such considerations "attached" to the item itself, that such considerations must be explicitly learned when first encountering the lexical item, and that such considerations override the baseline grammatical rules. This "plug and play" theory of syntax allows for arbitrarily complex statements to be uttered and understood without recourse to a massively (perhaps infinitely) complex instantiation of grammatical hardware in the brain.
Profile Image for Ushan.
801 reviews77 followers
June 30, 2012
Jackendoff is a distinguished linguist, and he is qualified to give a general overview of linguistics as few people are. Language is a specialized mental ability, like binocular vision or walking. It is specific to the human species - but many mammals have such specific abilities: the nose-touch sense of the star-nosed mole, the electric sense of the platypus, the echolocation of microbats and toothed whales. Like learning to walk, teething and puberty, learning a native language occurs at a specific age. Someone exposed to a language from birth learns it, on average, better than someone exposed to it at age 6; at age 12 it is worse still; at age 18 still. After age 18 the ability to learn a new language levels off, and becomes a kind of generic cognitive ability, like the ability to play chess or to acquire a professional skill. Universal grammar is another name for this ability to acquire a native language in childhood.

Jackendoff believes that generative grammar is too "syntactocentric" to describe language properly. He gives diagrams for five of Noam Chomsky's linguistic theories developed from 1968 to 1993; they are becoming ever more ornate. Instead, he thinks that phonology, syntax and semantics are all equally important generative systems, and the lexicon, stored in long-term memory, serves as the interface between each pair. What is actually stored in memory aren't words but some sort of combination of roots and morphological rules: a highly inflected language like Turkish can have as many as 10,000 possible words for each word in a poorly inflected language like English; surely, a native speaker of Turkish does not memorize 10,000 times as much as a native speaker of English. Syntax cannot be the only important component of language because a large percentage of utterances stand outside of syntax: things like "Yes", "Hello", "Ouch"; things like "tra-la-la" and "rickety-tickety-tin" have no semantic content either; I wonder where "blah blah blah" and "la dee da" belong.

One interesting chapter in Jackendoff's book is about a possible evolutionary history of language. He thinks that a language without syntax is of course not as expressive as true language but more so than no language at all. There has been a study of the speech of migrant workers who have not had formal instruction in the language of their host countries. It has stripped-down syntax and morphology, the word order is Agent First, Focus Last, and modifiers are adjacent to the word being modified. It is possible that the same was true of "protolanguage". Jackendoff also thinks that English noun compounds like "snowman", "wheelchair" and "garbageman", or even "failed password security question answer attempts limit", are a relic of an earlier stage of the language. The listener knows that a snowman is a sculpture of a man made of snow, a wheelchair is a chair with wheels instead of legs, and a garbageman is a man responsible for hauling away garbage; he does not need syntax to figure it out. I wonder how this squares with Semitic languages such as Arabic and Hebrew, where noun compounding is a major part of syntax, and unlike English, the head noun comes first (for example, in Modern Hebrew, "the holiday candlelight" is "or nerot ha-chag", "light-of candles-of the-holiday").
Profile Image for Karl Georg.
61 reviews4 followers
December 7, 2012
The sub-title is "Brain, Meaning, Grammar, Evolution", and bringing these together in a coherent theoretical framework is the ambition shaping this book. While I am far from being knowledgable enough in the field (any of the many fields being touched upon) to be able to comment on Jackendoff's effort in detail, his thesis that only via such a holistic approach we will have a chance to significantly advance our understanding of thought and language is convincingly presented. At the same time the book is reasonably readable for a non-expert, and the author clearly marks the areas where knowledge ends and speculation begins. Recommended.
23 reviews3 followers
August 15, 2010
The first part of the book is an excellent serious introduction to modern linguistics. This part by itself is worth reading. It's followed by Jackendoff's proposal for where it should go from here.
1 review
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July 26, 2013
i want to improve my English language so i want to read this book and am Intrested in m.a Linguistics
stice
Profile Image for Mike Putnam.
28 reviews11 followers
September 9, 2014
One of my favorite books as an "introductory" text to thinking about linguistics.
11 reviews
June 14, 2015
I got about 2/3 through it.

I like his clear writing style.
Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews

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