功能主义的语法研究方法及其演变

Joan Bybee
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引用次数: 81

摘要

在考虑人类学习和使用语法的能力是如何进化的问题时,在很大程度上取决于对语法性质的描述。近年来,这场争论一直被那些认为语法由严格的、绝对的规则和结构组成的人所主导,这些规则和结构远离口语,以至于儿童无法从环境中可用的输入中学习它们(Pinker和Bloom 1990;乔姆斯基1975)。在乔姆斯基的带领下,麻省理工学院的语言学家及其相关人员接受了这样一种观点,即抽象的语法原则存在于先天的语言习得装置中,这是大脑的一个模块,为儿童提供基本的语法原则。这个装置包含了通用语法的所有原则,旨在解释儿童如何在没有正式指导的情况下快速习得语言,此外,它还旨在概括所有语言共有的核心特征(Bickerton 1981;乔姆斯基1965;Pinker 1994)。在这种观点中,语法是高度抽象的知识,是自主的,不能约化为系统外的概念(Newmeyer 1990)。这意味着语法与意义、功能或语言的用法没有直接关系,而是构成了一个纯粹抽象的系统。拥有这种天生的系统使智人有可能习得语言,而缺乏这种装置则阻碍了我们的近亲类人猿家族的语言习得。根据这种语法理论,进化论的问题是这样一个专门的装置是如何进化的,因为据我们所知,我们的
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A FUNCTIONALIST APPROACH TO GRAMMAR AND ITS EvoLUTION
In considering the question of how the human capacity to learn and use grammar could have evolved, a great deal depends on the characterization of the nature of grammar. In recent years the debate has been dominated by those who believe that grammar consists of rigid, categorical rules and structures of such a remove from the spoken language that children could not learn them from the input available in the environment (Pinker and Bloom 1990; Chomsky 1975). Led by Chomsky, linguists at MIT, and those associated with them, have accepted the view that abstract grammatical principles are lodged in an innate Language Acquisition Device, a module of the mind that supplies the child with the basic principles of grammar. This device, containing as it does, all the principles of Universal Grammar, is meant to explain how children acquire their language rapidly and without formal instruction, and in addition, it is meant to encapsulate the core features that all languages have in common (Bickerton 1981; Chomsky 1965; Pinker 1994). In this view, grammar is highly abstract knowledge which is autonomous and not reducible to concepts outside the system (Newmeyer 1990). This means that grammar does not relate directly to meaning or function or indeed to the uses to which language is put, but rather it constitutes a purely abstract system. Possession of this innate system makes language acquisition possible for homo sapiens, while the lack of such a device precludes language acquisition by our close relatives in the great ape family. Given this theory of grammar, the question for evolution is how such a specialized device could have evolved, since as far as we know, none of our
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