那不是“Lenneberg的梦”

IF 0.2 4区 文学 0 LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS
V. M. Longa
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引用次数: 2

摘要

埃里克·海因茨·伦内伯格(1921-1975),杜塞尔多夫出生的神经科学家和语言学家,1967年出版了他的代表作《语言的生物学基础》。这本书现在被公认为该领域的经典,开创了语言生物学的科学研究,自出版以来产生了巨大的影响。然而,对这部作品的一些解读并没有准确地捕捉到作者的生物学和语言学思维。在这里,我专注于一种这样的解释,即领先的生成性获取主义者肯尼斯·韦克斯勒(1942年-)的解释,他提出了他所说的“伦内伯格的梦想”,将伦内伯格描绘成相信像语言这样的特质直接植根于基因组。本文将表明,Lenneberg的观点实际上与Wexler的观点大相径庭。首先,尽管后一位作者明确采取了从生成语法诞生之初就以基因为中心的立场,但前者将基因的作用相对化,并拒绝将基因组作为语言的直接来源。其次,韦克斯勒的立场可以被证明是预格式主义者,假设基因组包含一个特定的语言程序;相比之下,Lenneberg从未接受这一立场,而是采取了相反的、表观主义的立场。总之,Lenneberg做了一个完全不同的梦。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
That Was Not ‘Lenneberg’s Dream’
Eric Heinz Lenneberg (1921–1975), a neuroscientist and linguist born in Düsseldorf, published his masterpiece Biological Foundations of Language in 1967. This book, now recognized as a classic in the field, inaugurated the scientific study of the biology of language, and has since its publication exerted an enormous influence. However, some interpretations of this work do not accurately capture the author’s biological and linguistic thinking. Here I concentrate on one such interpretation, that of leading generative acquisitionist Kenneth Wexler (1942-), who has formulated what he terms ‘Lenneberg’s dream’, portraying Lenneberg as believing that a trait like language is directly rooted in the genome. The present paper will show that Lenneberg’s view was in fact quite different from that assumed by Wexler. First, while the latter author explicitly adopts the genocentric stance that has characterized generative grammar since its very inception, the former relativized the role of genes and rejected the genome as the direct source of language. Second, Wexler’s position can be shown to be preformationist, assuming the genome to contain a specific program for language; Lenneberg, in contrast, never embraced that position and instead adopted an opposite, epigenesist stance. In sum, Lenneberg dreamt a completely different dream.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
8
期刊介绍: Historiographia Linguistica (HL) serves the ever growing community of scholars interested in the history of the sciences concerned with language such as linguistics, philology, anthropology, sociology, pedagogy, psychology, neurology, and other disciplines. Central objectives of HL are the critical presentation of the origin and development of particular ideas, concepts, methods, schools of thought or trends, and the discussion of the methodological and philosophical foundations of a historiography of the language sciences, including its relationship with the history and philosophy of science. HL is published in 3 issues per year of about 450 pages altogether.
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