有趣的部分是无意识的:诺姆·乔姆斯基访谈

IF 0.6 0 LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS
M. Schiffmann
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引用次数: 1

摘要

今天是1月23日,我们在麻省剑桥的麻省理工学院。这将是对诺姆·乔姆斯基长达60到65年的采访,我们将尽可能多地涵盖话题。在开始之前,我应该把它放在一个背景中。我第一次采访诺姆·乔姆斯基(Noam Chomsky)是在两年半前,就在麻省理工学院,无意中,这变成了一个完整的系列,今天的采访是这个系列的结尾,但希望不是我们谈话的结束。(两个都笑了起来。嗯,在我看来,这也是我正在从事的您的研究项目的核心部分,在您的工作中,有许多红线贯穿着您的工作,那就是,首先,追求科学描述的简单性,正如我们将看到的,这有几个方面,然后是抽象性问题,我们将与之前的情况和您开始研究的情况进行比较。一个密切相关的问题后来出现在了前沿,那就是心算中的局部性,局部性关系。第四,生物语言学的问题,意思是语言可以,也被你视为,最终分析的生物对象,还有,这是第五点,你所做的一切都是在与其他人的密切合作中发展起来的。所以这不是,我们不只是在谈论诺姆·乔姆斯基的作品,而是一种合作的努力。从1946年开始,我记得在我之前的采访中,那实际上是你认识谁将成为你的老师的时期,泽利格·哈里斯。你要做的第一件事就是阅读他最著名的作品《结构语言学方法》(哈里斯,1951)还有一件事是我早上刚看到的,那是我第一次看到巴塞罗那——我想那是在11月的西班牙的某个地方——你说除了遇见哈里斯之外,你研究语言学的另一个动机是,你发现圣经,圣经的头几个字被误译了。你能不能,也许这是个很好的开始。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Interesting Part Is What Is Not Conscious: An Interview with Noam Chomsky
OK, it’s January the 23rd, we are at the MIT in Cambridge, Massachusetts. This will be a 60 minute interview with Noam Chomsky on the sixty to sixty-five years of his work, and we will try to cover as many topics as possible. To start off with this, I should put this into a context. I first started to interview Noam Chomsky about this [i.e. the history of generative grammar] two and a half years ago, right here at the MIT, and inadvertently, this grew into a whole series, and today’s interview is meant to be the end of the series, but not, hopefully, the end of our talks. [Both laugh.] Well, as I see it, and that’s a central part of the research project on your work I’m working on, there are, among many others, several red threads that run through your work, and that would be, first, the quest for simplicity in scientific description, and as we will see, that has several aspects, then the question of abstractness, which we will see in comparison to what went on before and what you started to work with. A closely related question that came to the forefront later was locality, local relations in mental computations. Fourth, the question of biolinguistics, meaning that language can be, and is seen by you, as a biological object in the final analysis, and also, that would be the fifth point, everything you did has always been developed in close collaboration with other people. So it’s not, we are not simply talking about the work of Noam Chomsky, but it’s a collaborative effort. Starting in 1946, I remember from my previous interviews that that is actually the period when you got to know who would become your teacher later on, Zellig Harris. And one of the first things you did was to read the galleys for his best-known work, Methods in Structural Linguistics (Harris 1951). There is another anecdote that I just saw in the morning, when for the first time I saw that Barcelona—I think it was in Spain somewhere in November—talk,1 when you said that another motive, apart from meeting Harris, for going into linguistics, was that you discovered that the Bible, the first words of the Bible had been mistranslated. Can you—maybe that’s a good point to start.
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来源期刊
Biolinguistics
Biolinguistics LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS-
CiteScore
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