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Evolutionary linguistics

Evolutionary linguistics or Darwinian linguistics is a sociobiological approach to the study of language.[1][2] Evolutionary linguists consider linguistics as a subfield of sociobiology and evolutionary psychology. The approach is also closely linked with evolutionary anthropology, cognitive linguistics and biolinguistics. Studying languages as the products of nature, it is interested in the biological origin and development of language.[3] Evolutionary linguistics is contrasted with humanistic approaches, especially structural linguistics.[4]

A main challenge in this research is the lack of empirical data: there are no archaeological traces of early human language. Computational biological modelling and clinical research with artificial languages have been employed to fill in gaps of knowledge. Although biology is understood to shape the brain, which processes language, there is no clear link between biology and specific human language structures or linguistic universals.[5]

For lack of a breakthrough in the field, there have been numerous debates about what kind of natural phenomenon language might be. Some researchers focus on the innate aspects of language. It is suggested that grammar has emerged adaptationally from the human genome, bringing about a language instinct;[6] or that it depends on a single mutation[7] which has caused a language organ to appear in the human brain.[8] This is hypothesized to result in a crystalline[9] grammatical structure underlying all human languages. Others suggest language is not crystallized, but fluid and ever-changing.[10] Others, yet, liken languages to living organisms.[11] Languages are considered analogous to a parasite[12] or populations of mind-viruses. While there is no solid scientific evidence for any of the claims, some of them have been labelled as pseudoscience.[13][14]

History

1863–1945: social Darwinism

Although pre-Darwinian theorists had compared languages to living organisms as a metaphor, the comparison was first taken literally in 1863 by the historical linguist August Schleicher who was inspired by Charles Darwin's On the Origin of Species.[15] At the time there was not enough evidence to prove that Darwin's theory of natural selection was correct. Schleicher proposed that linguistics could be used as a testing ground for the study of the evolution of species.[16] A review of Schleicher's book Darwinism as Tested by the Science of Language appeared in the first issue of Nature journal in 1870.[17] Darwin reiterated Schleicher's proposition in his 1871 book The Descent of Man, claiming that languages are comparable to species, and that language change occurs through natural selection as words 'struggle for life'. Darwin believed that languages had evolved from animal mating calls.[18] Darwinists considered the concept of language creation as unscientific.[19]

August Schleicher and his friend Ernst Haeckel were keen gardeners and regarded the study of cultures as a type of botany, with different species competing for the same living space.[20][16] Similar ideas became later advocated by politicians who wanted to appeal to working class voters, not least by the national socialists who subsequently included the concept of struggle for living space in their agenda.[21] Highly influential until the end of World War II, social Darwinism was eventually banished from human sciences, leading to a strict separation of natural and sociocultural studies.[16]

This gave rise to the dominance of structural linguistics in Europe. There had long been a dispute between the Darwinists and the French intellectuals with the topic of language evolution famously having been banned by the Paris Linguistic Society as early as in 1866. Ferdinand de Saussure proposed structuralism to replace evolutionary linguistics in his Course in General Linguistics, published posthumously in 1916. The structuralists rose to academic political power in human and social sciences in the aftermath of the student revolts of Spring 1968, establishing Sorbonne as an international centrepoint of humanistic thinking.

From 1959 onwards: genetic determinism

In the United States, structuralism was however fended off by the advocates of behavioural psychology; a linguistics framework nicknamed as 'American structuralism'. It was eventually replaced by the approach of Noam Chomsky who published a modification of Louis Hjelmslev's formal structuralist theory, claiming that syntactic structures are innate. An active figure in peace demonstrations in the 1950s and 1960s, Chomsky rose to academic political power following Spring 1968 at the MIT.[22]

Chomsky became an influential opponent of the French intellectuals during the following decades, and his supporters successfully confronted the post-structuralists in the Science Wars of the late 1990s.[23] The shift of the century saw a new academic funding policy where interdisciplinary research became favoured, effectively directing research funds to biological humanities.[24] The decline of structuralism was evident by 2015 with Sorbonne having lost its former spirit.[25]

Chomsky eventually claimed that syntactic structures are caused by a random mutation in the human genome,[7] proposing a similar explanation for other human faculties such as ethics.[22] But Steven Pinker argued in 1990 that they are the outcome of evolutionary adaptations.[26]

From 1976 onwards: Neo-Darwinism

At the same time when the Chomskyan paradigm of biological determinism defeated humanism, it was losing its own clout within sociobiology. It was reported likewise in 2015 that generative grammar was under fire in applied linguistics and in the process of being replaced with usage-based linguistics;[27] a derivative of Richard Dawkins's memetics.[28] It is a concept of linguistic units as replicators. Following the publication of memetics in Dawkins's 1976 nonfiction bestseller The Selfish Gene, many biologically inclined linguists, frustrated with the lack of evidence for Chomsky's Universal Grammar, grouped under different brands including a framework called Cognitive Linguistics (with capitalised initials), and 'functional' (adaptational) linguistics (not to be confused with functional linguistics) to confront both Chomsky and the humanists.[4] The replicator approach is today dominant in evolutionary linguistics, applied linguistics, cognitive linguistics and linguistic typology; while the generative approach has maintained its position in general linguistics, especially syntax; and in computational linguistics.

View of linguistics

Evolutionary linguistics is part of a wider framework of Universal Darwinism. In this view, linguistics is seen as an ecological environment for research traditions struggling for the same resources.[4] According to David Hull, these traditions correspond to species in biology. Relationships between research traditions can be symbiotic, competitive or parasitic. An adaptation of Hull's theory in linguistics is proposed by William Croft.[3] He argues that the Darwinian method is more advantageous than linguistic models based on physics, structuralist sociology, or hermeneutics.[4]

Approaches

Evolutionary linguistics is often divided into functionalism and formalism,[29] concepts which are not to be confused with functionalism and formalism in the humanistic reference.[30] Functional evolutionary linguistics considers languages as adaptations to human mind. The formalist view regards them as crystallised or non-adaptational.[29]

Functionalism (adaptationism)

The adaptational view of language is advocated by various frameworks of cognitive and evolutionary linguistics, with the terms 'functionalism' and 'Cognitive Linguistics' often being equated.[31] It is hypothesised that the evolution of the animal brain provides humans with a mechanism of abstract reasoning which is a 'metaphorical' version of image-based reasoning.[32] Language is not considered as a separate area of cognition, but as coinciding with general cognitive capacities, such as perception, attention, motor skills, and spatial and visual processing. It is argued to function according to the same principles as these.[33][34]

It is thought that the brain links action schemes to form–meaning pairs which are called constructions.[35] Cognitive linguistic approaches to syntax are called cognitive and construction grammar.[33] Also deriving from memetics and other cultural replicator theories,[3] these can study the natural or social selection and adaptation of linguistic units. Adaptational models reject a formal systemic view of language and consider language as a population of linguistic units.

The bad reputation of social Darwinism and memetics has been discussed in the literature, and recommendations for new terminology have been given.[36] What correspond to replicators or mind-viruses in memetics are called linguemes in Croft's theory of Utterance Selection (TUS),[37] and likewise linguemes or constructions in construction grammar and usage-based linguistics;[38][39] and metaphors,[40] frames[41] or schemas[42] in cognitive and construction grammar. The reference of memetics has been largely replaced with that of a Complex Adaptive System.[43] In current linguistics, this term covers a wide range of evolutionary notions while maintaining the Neo-Darwinian concepts of replication and replicator population.[44]

Functional evolutionary linguistics is not to be confused with functional humanistic linguistics.

Formalism (structuralism)

Advocates of formal evolutionary explanation in linguistics argue that linguistic structures are crystallised. Inspired by 19th century advances in crystallography, Schleicher argued that different types of languages are like plants, animals and crystals.[45] The idea of linguistic structures as frozen drops was revived in tagmemics,[46] an approach to linguistics with the goal to uncover divine symmetries underlying all languages, as if caused by the Creation.[47]

In modern biolinguistics, the X-bar tree is argued to be like natural systems such as ferromagnetic droplets and botanic forms.[48] Generative grammar considers syntactic structures similar to snowflakes.[9] It is hypothesised that such patterns are caused by a mutation in humans.[7]

The formal–structural evolutionary aspect of linguistics is not to be confused with structural linguistics.

Evidence

There was some hope of a breakthrough at the discovery of the FOXP2 gene.[49][50] There is little support, however, for the idea that FOXP2 is 'the grammar gene' or that it had much to do with the relatively recent emergence of syntactical speech.[51] There is no evidence that people have a language instinct.[52] Memetics is widely discredited as pseudoscience[14] and neurological claims made by evolutionary cognitive linguists have been likened to pseudoscience.[13] All in all, there does not appear to be any evidence for the basic tenets of evolutionary linguistics beyond the fact that language is processed by the brain, and brain structures are shaped by genes.[5]

Criticism

Evolutionary linguistics has been criticised by advocates of (humanistic) structural and functional linguistics. Ferdinand de Saussure commented on 19th century evolutionary linguistics:

"Language was considered a specific sphere, a fourth natural kingdom; this led to methods of reasoning which would have caused astonishment in other sciences. Today one cannot read a dozen lines written at that time without being struck by absurdities of reasoning and by the terminology used to justify these absurdities”[53]

Mark Aronoff, however, argues that historical linguistics had its golden age during the time of Schleicher and his supporters, enjoying a place among the hard sciences, and considers the return of Darwnian linguistics as a positive development. Esa Itkonen nonetheless deems the revival of Darwinism as a hopeless enterprise:

"There is ... an application of intelligence in linguistic change which is absent in biological evolution; and this suffices to make the two domains totally disanalogous ... [Grammaticalisation depends on] cognitive processes, ultimately serving the goal of problem solving, which intelligent entities like humans must perform all the time, but which biological entities like genes cannot perform. Trying to eliminate this basic difference leads to confusion.”[54]

Itkonen also points out that the principles of natural selection are not applicable because language innovation and acceptance have the same source which is the speech community. In biological evolution, mutation and selection have different sources. This makes it possible for people to change their languages, but not their genotype.[55]

See also

References

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Further reading

  • Atkinson QD, Meade A, Venditti C, Greenhill SJ, Pagel M (2008). "Languages evolve in punctuational bursts". Science. 319 (5863): 588. doi:10.1126/science.1149683. hdl:1885/33371. PMID 18239118. S2CID 29740420.
  • Botha, R; Knight, C., eds. (2009). The Cradle of Language. Oxford Series in the Evolution of Language. Oxford.: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-954586-5. OCLC 804498749.
    • Diller, Karl C.; Cann, Rebecca L. (2009). Rudolf Botha; Chris Knight (eds.). Evidence Against a Genetic-Based Revolution in Language 50,000 Years Ago. The Cradle of Language. Oxford Series in the Evolution of Language. Oxford.: Oxford University Press. pp. 135–149. ISBN 978-0-19-954586-5. OCLC 804498749.
    • Power, Camilla (2009). Rudolf Botha; Chris Knight (eds.). Sexual Selection Models for the Emergence of Symbolic Communication: Why They Should be Reversed. The Cradle of Language. Oxford Series in the Evolution of Language. Oxford.: Oxford University Press. pp. 257–280. ISBN 978-0-19-954586-5. OCLC 804498749.
    • Watts, Ian (2009). Rudolf Botha; Chris Knight (eds.). Red Ochre, Body Painting, and Language: Interpreting the Blombos Ochre. The Cradle of Language. Oxford Series in the Evolution of Language. Oxford.: Oxford University Press. pp. 62–92. ISBN 978-0-19-954586-5. OCLC 804498749.
  • Cangelosi, A.; Harnad, S. (2001). "The adaptive advantage of symbolic theft over sensorimotor toil: Grounding language in perceptual categories". Evolution of Communication. 4 (1): 117–142. doi:10.1075/eoc.4.1.07can.
  • Carstairs-McCarthy, Andrew (2007). "Language evolution: What linguists can contribute". Lingua. 117 (3): 503–509. doi:10.1016/j.lingua.2005.07.004.
  • Christiansen, Morten H. (2013). Rudolf P Botha; Martin Everaert (eds.). Language has evolved to depend on multiple-cue integration. The evolutionary emergence of language : evidence and inferenc. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-965484-0. OCLC 828055639.
  • Christiansen, Morten H.; Kirby, Simon. (2003). Language evolution. Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-924484-3. OCLC 51235137.
    • Bickerton, Derek (2003). Morten H. Christiansen; Simon Kirby (eds.). Symbol and Structure: A Comprehensive Framework for Language Evolution. Language evolution. Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 77–93. ISBN 978-0-19-924484-3. OCLC 51235137.
    • Hurford, James R. (2003). Morten H. Christiansen; Simon Kirby (eds.). The Language Mosaic and Its Evolution. Language evolution. Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 38–57. ISBN 978-0-19-924484-3. OCLC 51235137.
    • Lieberman, Philip (2003). Morten H. Christiansen; Simon Kirby (eds.). Motor Control, Speech, and the Evolution of Language. Language evolution. Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 252–271. ISBN 978-0-19-924484-3. OCLC 51235137.
  • Deacon, Terrence William (1997). The symbolic species : the co-evolution of language and the brain. New York: W.W. Norton. ISBN 978-0-393-03838-5. OCLC 490308871.
  • Dor, Daniel; Jablonka, Eva (2001). Jürgen Trabant; Sean Ward (eds.). How language changed the genes: toward an explicit account of the evolution of language (PDF). New essays on the origin of language. Berlin; N.Y.: Mouton de Gruyter. pp. 149–175. ISBN 978-3-11-017025-2. OCLC 46935997.
  • Dor, Daniel; Jablonka, Eva (2000). "From Cultural Selection to Genetic Selection: A Framework for the Evolution of Language" (PDF). Selection 1. Retrieved 10 December 2013.
  • Elvira, Javier (2009). Evolución lingüística y cambio sintáctico. Fondo Hispánico de Lingüística y Filología. Bern et al.: Peter Lang. ISBN 978-3-0343-0323-1. OCLC 475438932.
  • Fitch, W. Tecumseh (2010). The Evolution of Language. Cambridge: Cambridge. ISBN 978-0-521-67736-3. OCLC 428024376.
  • Hauser, Marc D. (1996). The evolution of communication. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-262-08250-1. OCLC 750525164.
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    • Steklis, Horst D.; Harnad, Stevan R. (1976). Stevan R Harnad; Horst D Steklis; Jane Beckman Lancaster (eds.). From hand to mouth : some critical stages in the evolution of language. Origins and Evolution of Language and Speech. New York: New York Academy of Sciences. ISBN 978-0-89072-026-4. OCLC 2493424.
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  • Kenneally, Christine (2007). The First Word: The Search for the Origins of Language. New York, NY: Viking. ISBN 978-0-670-03490-1. OCLC 80460757.
  • Knight, Chris (2010). Ulrich J Frey; Charlotte Störmer; Kai P Willführ (eds.). The origins of symbolic culture (PDF). Homo novus : a human without illusion. Berlin; New York: Springer. pp. 193–211. ISBN 978-3-642-12141-8. OCLC 639461749.
  • Komarova, Natalia L. (2006). Leonid Grinin; Victor C. de Munck; Andrey Korotayev (eds.). Language and Mathematics: An evolutionary model of grammatical communication. History & mathematics : Analyzing and modeling global development. [Moskva]: URSS. pp. 164–179. ISBN 978-5-484-01001-1. OCLC 182730511.
  • Mithen, Steven J. (2005). The singing Neanderthals : the origins of music, language, mind and body. London: Weidenfeld Nicolson. ISBN 978-0-297-64317-3. OCLC 58052344.
  • Niyogi, Partha (2006). The computational nature of language learning and evolution. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-262-14094-2. OCLC 704652476.
  • Nowak, M.A.; Komarova, N.L. (2001). "Towards an evolutionary theory of language". Trends in Cognitive Sciences. 5 (7): 288–295. doi:10.1016/S1364-6613(00)01683-1. PMID 11425617. S2CID 1358838.
  • Pinker, Steven (1994). The language instinct. New York: W. Morrow and Co. ISBN 978-0-688-12141-9. OCLC 28723210.
  • Pinker, S.; Bloom, P. (1990). . Behavioral and Brain Sciences. 13 (4): 707–784. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.116.4044. doi:10.1017/S0140525X00081061. S2CID 6167614. Archived from the original on 2005-11-23. Retrieved 2005-12-20.
  • Sampson, Geoffrey (1996). Evolutionary language understanding. London; New York: Cassell. ISBN 978-0-304-33650-0. OCLC 832369870.
  • Steels, Luc (2002). Angelo Cangelosi; Domenico Parisi (eds.). Grounding symbols through evolutionary language games. Simulating the evolution of language. London; New York: Springer. ISBN 978-1-85233-428-4. OCLC 47824669.

External links

  • Agent-Based Models of Language Evolution
  • ARTI Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
  • Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory
  • Computerized comparative linguistics
  • Fluid Construction Grammar
  • Language Evolution and Computation Bibliography 2014-04-21 at the Wayback Machine
  • Language Evolution and Computation Research Unit, University of Edinburgh

evolutionary, linguistics, confused, with, historical, linguistics, darwinian, linguistics, sociobiological, approach, study, language, evolutionary, linguists, consider, linguistics, subfield, sociobiology, evolutionary, psychology, approach, also, closely, l. Not to be confused with Historical linguistics Evolutionary linguistics or Darwinian linguistics is a sociobiological approach to the study of language 1 2 Evolutionary linguists consider linguistics as a subfield of sociobiology and evolutionary psychology The approach is also closely linked with evolutionary anthropology cognitive linguistics and biolinguistics Studying languages as the products of nature it is interested in the biological origin and development of language 3 Evolutionary linguistics is contrasted with humanistic approaches especially structural linguistics 4 A main challenge in this research is the lack of empirical data there are no archaeological traces of early human language Computational biological modelling and clinical research with artificial languages have been employed to fill in gaps of knowledge Although biology is understood to shape the brain which processes language there is no clear link between biology and specific human language structures or linguistic universals 5 For lack of a breakthrough in the field there have been numerous debates about what kind of natural phenomenon language might be Some researchers focus on the innate aspects of language It is suggested that grammar has emerged adaptationally from the human genome bringing about a language instinct 6 or that it depends on a single mutation 7 which has caused a language organ to appear in the human brain 8 This is hypothesized to result in a crystalline 9 grammatical structure underlying all human languages Others suggest language is not crystallized but fluid and ever changing 10 Others yet liken languages to living organisms 11 Languages are considered analogous to a parasite 12 or populations of mind viruses While there is no solid scientific evidence for any of the claims some of them have been labelled as pseudoscience 13 14 Contents 1 History 1 1 1863 1945 social Darwinism 1 2 From 1959 onwards genetic determinism 1 3 From 1976 onwards Neo Darwinism 2 View of linguistics 3 Approaches 3 1 Functionalism adaptationism 3 2 Formalism structuralism 4 Evidence 5 Criticism 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory Edit1863 1945 social Darwinism Edit Although pre Darwinian theorists had compared languages to living organisms as a metaphor the comparison was first taken literally in 1863 by the historical linguist August Schleicher who was inspired by Charles Darwin s On the Origin of Species 15 At the time there was not enough evidence to prove that Darwin s theory of natural selection was correct Schleicher proposed that linguistics could be used as a testing ground for the study of the evolution of species 16 A review of Schleicher s book Darwinism as Tested by the Science of Language appeared in the first issue of Nature journal in 1870 17 Darwin reiterated Schleicher s proposition in his 1871 book The Descent of Man claiming that languages are comparable to species and that language change occurs through natural selection as words struggle for life Darwin believed that languages had evolved from animal mating calls 18 Darwinists considered the concept of language creation as unscientific 19 August Schleicher and his friend Ernst Haeckel were keen gardeners and regarded the study of cultures as a type of botany with different species competing for the same living space 20 16 Similar ideas became later advocated by politicians who wanted to appeal to working class voters not least by the national socialists who subsequently included the concept of struggle for living space in their agenda 21 Highly influential until the end of World War II social Darwinism was eventually banished from human sciences leading to a strict separation of natural and sociocultural studies 16 This gave rise to the dominance of structural linguistics in Europe There had long been a dispute between the Darwinists and the French intellectuals with the topic of language evolution famously having been banned by the Paris Linguistic Society as early as in 1866 Ferdinand de Saussure proposed structuralism to replace evolutionary linguistics in his Course in General Linguistics published posthumously in 1916 The structuralists rose to academic political power in human and social sciences in the aftermath of the student revolts of Spring 1968 establishing Sorbonne as an international centrepoint of humanistic thinking From 1959 onwards genetic determinism Edit In the United States structuralism was however fended off by the advocates of behavioural psychology a linguistics framework nicknamed as American structuralism It was eventually replaced by the approach of Noam Chomsky who published a modification of Louis Hjelmslev s formal structuralist theory claiming that syntactic structures are innate An active figure in peace demonstrations in the 1950s and 1960s Chomsky rose to academic political power following Spring 1968 at the MIT 22 Chomsky became an influential opponent of the French intellectuals during the following decades and his supporters successfully confronted the post structuralists in the Science Wars of the late 1990s 23 The shift of the century saw a new academic funding policy where interdisciplinary research became favoured effectively directing research funds to biological humanities 24 The decline of structuralism was evident by 2015 with Sorbonne having lost its former spirit 25 Chomsky eventually claimed that syntactic structures are caused by a random mutation in the human genome 7 proposing a similar explanation for other human faculties such as ethics 22 But Steven Pinker argued in 1990 that they are the outcome of evolutionary adaptations 26 From 1976 onwards Neo Darwinism Edit At the same time when the Chomskyan paradigm of biological determinism defeated humanism it was losing its own clout within sociobiology It was reported likewise in 2015 that generative grammar was under fire in applied linguistics and in the process of being replaced with usage based linguistics 27 a derivative of Richard Dawkins s memetics 28 It is a concept of linguistic units as replicators Following the publication of memetics in Dawkins s 1976 nonfiction bestseller The Selfish Gene many biologically inclined linguists frustrated with the lack of evidence for Chomsky s Universal Grammar grouped under different brands including a framework called Cognitive Linguistics with capitalised initials and functional adaptational linguistics not to be confused with functional linguistics to confront both Chomsky and the humanists 4 The replicator approach is today dominant in evolutionary linguistics applied linguistics cognitive linguistics and linguistic typology while the generative approach has maintained its position in general linguistics especially syntax and in computational linguistics View of linguistics EditEvolutionary linguistics is part of a wider framework of Universal Darwinism In this view linguistics is seen as an ecological environment for research traditions struggling for the same resources 4 According to David Hull these traditions correspond to species in biology Relationships between research traditions can be symbiotic competitive or parasitic An adaptation of Hull s theory in linguistics is proposed by William Croft 3 He argues that the Darwinian method is more advantageous than linguistic models based on physics structuralist sociology or hermeneutics 4 Approaches EditEvolutionary linguistics is often divided into functionalism and formalism 29 concepts which are not to be confused with functionalism and formalism in the humanistic reference 30 Functional evolutionary linguistics considers languages as adaptations to human mind The formalist view regards them as crystallised or non adaptational 29 Functionalism adaptationism Edit The adaptational view of language is advocated by various frameworks of cognitive and evolutionary linguistics with the terms functionalism and Cognitive Linguistics often being equated 31 It is hypothesised that the evolution of the animal brain provides humans with a mechanism of abstract reasoning which is a metaphorical version of image based reasoning 32 Language is not considered as a separate area of cognition but as coinciding with general cognitive capacities such as perception attention motor skills and spatial and visual processing It is argued to function according to the same principles as these 33 34 It is thought that the brain links action schemes to form meaning pairs which are called constructions 35 Cognitive linguistic approaches to syntax are called cognitive and construction grammar 33 Also deriving from memetics and other cultural replicator theories 3 these can study the natural or social selection and adaptation of linguistic units Adaptational models reject a formal systemic view of language and consider language as a population of linguistic units The bad reputation of social Darwinism and memetics has been discussed in the literature and recommendations for new terminology have been given 36 What correspond to replicators or mind viruses in memetics are called linguemes in Croft s theory of Utterance Selection TUS 37 and likewise linguemes or constructions in construction grammar and usage based linguistics 38 39 and metaphors 40 frames 41 or schemas 42 in cognitive and construction grammar The reference of memetics has been largely replaced with that of a Complex Adaptive System 43 In current linguistics this term covers a wide range of evolutionary notions while maintaining the Neo Darwinian concepts of replication and replicator population 44 Functional evolutionary linguistics is not to be confused with functional humanistic linguistics Formalism structuralism Edit Advocates of formal evolutionary explanation in linguistics argue that linguistic structures are crystallised Inspired by 19th century advances in crystallography Schleicher argued that different types of languages are like plants animals and crystals 45 The idea of linguistic structures as frozen drops was revived in tagmemics 46 an approach to linguistics with the goal to uncover divine symmetries underlying all languages as if caused by the Creation 47 In modern biolinguistics the X bar tree is argued to be like natural systems such as ferromagnetic droplets and botanic forms 48 Generative grammar considers syntactic structures similar to snowflakes 9 It is hypothesised that such patterns are caused by a mutation in humans 7 The formal structural evolutionary aspect of linguistics is not to be confused with structural linguistics Evidence EditThere was some hope of a breakthrough at the discovery of the FOXP2 gene 49 50 There is little support however for the idea that FOXP2 is the grammar gene or that it had much to do with the relatively recent emergence of syntactical speech 51 There is no evidence that people have a language instinct 52 Memetics is widely discredited as pseudoscience 14 and neurological claims made by evolutionary cognitive linguists have been likened to pseudoscience 13 All in all there does not appear to be any evidence for the basic tenets of evolutionary linguistics beyond the fact that language is processed by the brain and brain structures are shaped by genes 5 Criticism EditEvolutionary linguistics has been criticised by advocates of humanistic structural and functional linguistics Ferdinand de Saussure commented on 19th century evolutionary linguistics Language was considered a specific sphere a fourth natural kingdom this led to methods of reasoning which would have caused astonishment in other sciences Today one cannot read a dozen lines written at that time without being struck by absurdities of reasoning and by the terminology used to justify these absurdities 53 Mark Aronoff however argues that historical linguistics had its golden age during the time of Schleicher and his supporters enjoying a place among the hard sciences and considers the return of Darwnian linguistics as a positive development Esa Itkonen nonetheless deems the revival of Darwinism as a hopeless enterprise There is an application of intelligence in linguistic change which is absent in biological evolution and this suffices to make the two domains totally disanalogous Grammaticalisation depends on cognitive processes ultimately serving the goal of problem solving which intelligent entities like humans must perform all the time but which biological entities like genes cannot perform Trying to eliminate this basic difference leads to confusion 54 Itkonen also points out that the principles of natural selection are not applicable because language innovation and acceptance have the same source which is the speech community In biological evolution mutation and selection have different sources This makes it possible for people to change their languages but not their genotype 55 See also Edit Evolutionary biology portalBiolinguistics Evolutionary psychology of language FOXP2 Origin of language Historical linguistics Phylogenetic tree Universal DarwinismReferences Edit Gontier Nathalie 2012 Selectionist approaches in evolutionary linguistics an epistemological analysis International Studies in the Philosophy of Science 26 1 67 95 doi 10 1080 02698595 2012 653114 hdl 10451 45246 S2CID 121742473 McMahon April McMahon Robert 2012 Evolutionary Linguistics Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521891394 a b c Croft William October 2008 Evolutionary Linguistics Annual Review of Anthropology 37 219 234 doi 10 1146 annurev anthro 37 081407 085156 a b c d Croft William 1993 Functional typological theory in its historical and intellectual context STUF Language Typology and Universals 46 1 4 15 26 doi 10 1524 stuf 1993 46 14 15 S2CID 170296028 a b Gibson Kathleen R Tallerman Maggie eds 2011 The Oxford Handbook of Language Evolution Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199541119 Pinker Steven 1994 The Language Instinct How the Mind Creates Language PDF Penguin Books ISBN 9780140175295 Retrieved 2020 03 03 a b c Berwick Robert C Chomsky Noam 2015 Why Only Us Language and Evolution MIT Press ISBN 9780262034241 Anderson Stephen R Lightfoot David W 2003 The Language Organ Linguistics as Cognitive Psychology Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521007832 a b Chomsky Noam 2015 The Minimalist Program 20th Anniversary Edition MIT Press ISBN 978 0 262 52734 7 Bybee Joan L Beckner Clay 2015 Usage Based theory In Heine Bernd Narrog Heiko eds The Oxford Handbook of Linguistic Analysis Oxford University Press pp 953 980 doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199544004 013 0032 van Driem George 2005 The language organism the Leiden theory of language evolution In Minett James W Wang William S Y eds Language Acquisition Change and Emergence Essays in Evolutionary Linguistics pp 331 340 Hung Tzu wei 2019 How did language evolve Some reflections on the language parasite debate Biological Theory 14 4 214 223 doi 10 1007 s13752 019 00321 x S2CID 145846758 Retrieved 2020 03 02 a b Schwarz Friesel Monika 2012 On the status of external evidence in the theories of cognitive linguistics Language Sciences 34 6 656 664 doi 10 1016 j langsci 2012 04 007 a b Polichak James W 2002 Memes as pseudoscience In Shermer Michael ed The Skeptic Encyclopedia of Pseudoscience Vol 1 ABC Clio pp 664 667 ISBN 1 57607 653 9 Stamos David N 2006 Darwin and the Nature of Species SUNY Press p 55 ISBN 9780791480885 Retrieved 2020 03 03 a b c Aronoff Mark 2017 20 Darwinism tested by the science of language In Bowern Horn Zanuttini eds On Looking into Words and Beyond Structures Relations Analyses SUNY Press pp 443 456 ISBN 978 3 946234 92 0 Retrieved 2020 03 03 Muller Max 1870 Darwinism tested by the science of language review Nature 1 256 259 doi 10 1038 001256a0 S2CID 176892155 Darwin Charles 1981 1871 The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex PDF Princeton University Press pp 59 61 ISBN 0 691 08278 2 Retrieved 2020 03 03 Schleicher August 1869 1863 Darwinism Tested by the Science of Language English translation John Camden Hotten ISBN 0 691 08278 2 Retrieved 2020 03 03 Richards Robert J 2002 The linguistic creation of man Charles Darwin August Schleicher Ernst Haeckel and themissing link in 19th century evolutionary theory In Doerres M ed The Experimenting in Tongues Studies in Science and Language Stanford University Press pp 21 48 ISBN 1 57607 653 9 Richards R J 2013 Was Hitler a Darwinian Disputed Questions in the History of Evolutionary Theory University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 05893 1 a b Smith Neil 2002 Chomsky Ideas and Ideals 2nd ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 47517 1 Bricmont jean Franck Julie 2010 Bricmont jean Franck Julie eds Chomsky Notebook Columbia University Press ISBN 9780231144759 Rhoten Diana July 19 2016 Interdisciplinary research trend or transition Language Sciences Retrieved 2020 03 03 Hazareesingh Sudhir September 19 2015 The decline of the French intellectual Politico Retrieved 2020 03 03 Pinker Steven Bloom Paul 2011 Natural language and natural selection PDF Behavioral and Brain Sciences 13 4 707 727 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 116 4044 doi 10 1017 S0140525X00081061 S2CID 6167614 de Bot Kees 2015 A History of Applied Linguistics From 1980 to the Present Routledge ISBN 9781138820654 Boesch Christoophe Tomasello Michael 1998 Chimpanzee and human cultures with a comment from James D Paterson Current Anthropology 39 5 591 614 doi 10 1086 204785 S2CID 55562574 Retrieved 2020 03 03 a b Darnell Moravcsik Noonan Newmeyer Wheatley eds 1999 Functionalism and Formalism in Linguistics Vol 1 John Benjamins pp 664 667 ISBN 9789027298799 Croft William 2015 Functional approaches to grammar In Wright James ed International Encyclopedia of the Social amp Behavioral Sciences Elsevier ISBN 9780080970875 About Cognitive Linguistics cognitivelinguistics org ICLA International Cognitive Linguistics Association Archived from the original on 2019 12 09 Retrieved 2020 05 12 Lakoff George 1990 Iinvariance hypothesis is abstract reasoning based on image schemas Cognitive Linguistics 1 1 39 74 doi 10 1515 cogl 1990 1 1 39 S2CID 144380802 a b Croft William Cruse Alan 2004 Cognitive Linguistics Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780511803864 Geeraerts Dirk 2006 Introduction a rough guide to Cognitive Linguistics In Geeraerts Dirk ed Cognitive Linguistics Basic Readings De Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 019990 1 Arbib Michael A 2015 Language evolution an emergentist perspective In MacWhinney and O Grady ed Handbook of Language Emergence Wiley pp 81 109 ISBN 9781118346136 Keller Rudi 1994 On Language Change the Invisible Hand in Language CRC Press ISBN 9780415076722 Croft William 2006 The relevance of an evolutionary model to historical linguistics In Nedergaard Thomsen Ole ed Competing Models of Linguistic Change Evolution and Beyond Current Issues in Linguistic Theory Vol 279 John Benjamins pp 91 132 doi 10 1075 cilt 279 08cro ISBN 978 90 272 4794 0 Kirby Simon 2013 Transitions the evolution of linguistic replicators In Binder Smith eds The Language Phenomenon PDF The Frontiers Collection Springer pp 121 138 doi 10 1007 978 3 642 36086 2 6 ISBN 978 3 642 36085 5 Retrieved 2020 03 04 Zehentner Eva 2019 Competition in Language Change the Rise of the English Dative Alternation De Gruyter Mouton ISBN 978 3 11 063385 6 Camarinha Matos Luis M Afsarmanesh Hamideh 2008 Collaborative Networks Reference Modeling Springer pp 139 164 ISBN 978 0 387 79426 6 Fillmore Charles J Baker Collin 2014 A frames Approach to Semantic Analysis PDF In Heine amp Narrog ed The Oxford Handbook of Linguistic analysis 2nd ed Oxford University Press pp 791 816 ISBN 978 0199677078 Langacker Roland 1987 Foundations of Cognitive Grammar Vol 1 Theoretical prerequisites Stanford University Press p 130 ISBN 978 0804738514 Frank Roslyn M 2008 The Language organism species analogy a complex adaptive systems approach to shifting perspectives on language In Frank ed Sociocultural Situatedness Vol 2 De Gruyter pp 215 262 ISBN 978 3 11 019911 6 Beckner Blythe Bybee Christiansen Croft Ellis Holland Ke Larsen Freeman Schoenemann 2009 Language is a Complex Adaptive System Position Paper PDF Language Learning 59 1 1 26 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9922 2009 00533 x Retrieved 2020 03 04 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Arbukle John 1970 August Schleicher and the Linguistics Philology Dichotomy A Chapter in the History of Linguistics Word 26 1 17 31 doi 10 1080 00437956 1970 11435578 Pike Kenneth Lee 1960 Nucleation Word 44 7 291 295 doi 10 1111 j 1540 4781 1960 tb01762 x Seuren Pieter 2015 Prestructuralist and structuralist approaches to syntax In Kiss and Alexiadou ed Syntax theory and analysis An international handbook De Gruyter pp 134 157 ISBN 9783110202762 Piattelli Palmarini Massimo Vitiello Giuseppei 2019 Linguistics and some aspects of its underlying dynamics Biolinguistics 9 96 115 arXiv 1506 08663 doi 10 5964 bioling 9033 ISSN 1450 3417 S2CID 14775156 Scharff C Haesler S December 2005 An evolutionary perspective on FoxP2 strictly for the birds Curr Opin Neurobiol 15 6 694 703 doi 10 1016 j conb 2005 10 004 PMID 16266802 S2CID 11350165 Scharff C Petri J July 2011 Evo devo deep homology and FoxP2 implications for the evolution of speech and language Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci 366 1574 2124 40 doi 10 1098 rstb 2011 0001 PMC 3130369 PMID 21690130 Diller Karl C Cann Rebecca L 2009 Rudolf Botha Chris Knight eds Evidence Against a Genetic Based Revolution in Language 50 000 Years Ago The Cradle of Language Oxford Series in the Evolution of Language Oxford Oxford University Press pp 135 149 ISBN 978 0 19 954586 5 OCLC 804498749 Sampson Geoffrey 2007 There is no language instinct PDF Ilha do Desterro 52 35 63 Retrieved 2020 03 04 de Saussure Ferdinand 1959 First published 1916 Course in general linguistics PDF New York Philosophy Library ISBN 9780231157278 Itkonen Esa 1999 Functionalism yes biologism no Zeitschrift fur Sprachwissenschaft 18 2 219 221 doi 10 1515 zfsw 1999 18 2 219 S2CID 146998564 Itkonen Esa 2011 On Coseriu s legacy PDF Energeia III 1 29 doi 10 55245 energeia 2011 001 S2CID 247142924 Retrieved 2020 01 14 Further reading EditAtkinson QD Meade A Venditti C Greenhill SJ Pagel M 2008 Languages evolve in punctuational bursts Science 319 5863 588 doi 10 1126 science 1149683 hdl 1885 33371 PMID 18239118 S2CID 29740420 Botha R Knight C eds 2009 The Cradle of Language Oxford Series in the Evolution of Language Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 954586 5 OCLC 804498749 Diller Karl C Cann Rebecca L 2009 Rudolf Botha Chris Knight eds Evidence Against a Genetic Based Revolution in Language 50 000 Years Ago The Cradle of Language Oxford Series in the Evolution of Language Oxford Oxford University Press pp 135 149 ISBN 978 0 19 954586 5 OCLC 804498749 Power Camilla 2009 Rudolf Botha Chris Knight eds Sexual Selection Models for the Emergence of Symbolic Communication Why They Should be Reversed The Cradle of Language Oxford Series in the Evolution of Language Oxford Oxford University Press pp 257 280 ISBN 978 0 19 954586 5 OCLC 804498749 Watts Ian 2009 Rudolf Botha Chris Knight eds Red Ochre Body Painting and Language Interpreting the Blombos Ochre The Cradle of Language Oxford Series in the Evolution of Language Oxford Oxford University Press pp 62 92 ISBN 978 0 19 954586 5 OCLC 804498749 Cangelosi A Harnad S 2001 The adaptive advantage of symbolic theft over sensorimotor toil Grounding language in perceptual categories Evolution of Communication 4 1 117 142 doi 10 1075 eoc 4 1 07can Carstairs McCarthy Andrew 2007 Language evolution What linguists can contribute Lingua 117 3 503 509 doi 10 1016 j lingua 2005 07 004 Christiansen Morten H 2013 Rudolf P Botha Martin Everaert eds Language has evolved to depend on multiple cue integration The evolutionary emergence of language evidence and inferenc Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 965484 0 OCLC 828055639 Christiansen Morten H Kirby Simon 2003 Language evolution Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 924484 3 OCLC 51235137 Bickerton Derek 2003 Morten H Christiansen Simon Kirby eds Symbol and Structure A Comprehensive Framework for Language Evolution Language evolution Oxford New York Oxford University Press pp 77 93 ISBN 978 0 19 924484 3 OCLC 51235137 Hurford James R 2003 Morten H Christiansen Simon Kirby eds The Language Mosaic and Its Evolution Language evolution Oxford New York Oxford University Press pp 38 57 ISBN 978 0 19 924484 3 OCLC 51235137 Lieberman Philip 2003 Morten H Christiansen Simon Kirby eds Motor Control Speech and the Evolution of Language Language evolution Oxford New York Oxford University Press pp 252 271 ISBN 978 0 19 924484 3 OCLC 51235137 Deacon Terrence William 1997 The symbolic species the co evolution of language and the brain New York W W Norton ISBN 978 0 393 03838 5 OCLC 490308871 Dor Daniel Jablonka Eva 2001 Jurgen Trabant Sean Ward eds How language changed the genes toward an explicit account of the evolution of language PDF New essays on the origin of language Berlin N Y Mouton de Gruyter pp 149 175 ISBN 978 3 11 017025 2 OCLC 46935997 Dor Daniel Jablonka Eva 2000 From Cultural Selection to Genetic Selection A Framework for the Evolution of Language PDF Selection 1 Retrieved 10 December 2013 Elvira Javier 2009 Evolucion linguistica y cambio sintactico Fondo Hispanico de Linguistica y Filologia Bern et al Peter Lang ISBN 978 3 0343 0323 1 OCLC 475438932 Fitch W Tecumseh 2010 The Evolution of Language Cambridge Cambridge ISBN 978 0 521 67736 3 OCLC 428024376 Hauser Marc D 1996 The evolution of communication Cambridge Massachusetts MIT Press ISBN 978 0 262 08250 1 OCLC 750525164 Harnad Stevan R Steklis Horst D Lancaster Jane eds 1976 Origins and Evolution of Language and Speech Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences v 280 New York New York Academy of Sciences ISBN 978 0 89072 026 4 OCLC 2493424 Steklis Horst D Harnad Stevan R 1976 Stevan R Harnad Horst D Steklis Jane Beckman Lancaster eds From hand to mouth some critical stages in the evolution of language Origins and Evolution of Language and Speech New York New York Academy of Sciences ISBN 978 0 89072 026 4 OCLC 2493424 Hauser MD Chomsky N Fitch WT 2002 The faculty of language what is it who has it and how did it evolve PDF Science 298 5598 1569 79 doi 10 1126 science 298 5598 1569 PMID 12446899 Archived from the original PDF on 2007 09 26 Retrieved 2007 09 09 Heine Bernd Kuteva Tania 2007 The genesis of grammar a reconstructio Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 922777 8 OCLC 849464326 Hurford James R 2007 The origins of meaning Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 920785 5 OCLC 263645256 Jackendoff Ray 2002 Foundations of language brain meaning grammar evolution Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 827012 6 OCLC 48053881 Johanson Donald C Edgar Blake 2006 From Lucy to Language Revised updated and expanded ed New York NY Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 0 7432 8064 8 OCLC 72440476 Johansson Sverker 2005 Origins of language constraints on hypothese Amsterdam Philadelphia John Benjamins Pub ISBN 978 90 272 3891 7 OCLC 803876944 Kenneally Christine 2007 The First Word The Search for the Origins of Language New York NY Viking ISBN 978 0 670 03490 1 OCLC 80460757 Knight Chris 2010 Ulrich J Frey Charlotte Stormer Kai P Willfuhr eds The origins of symbolic culture PDF Homo novus a human without illusion Berlin New York Springer pp 193 211 ISBN 978 3 642 12141 8 OCLC 639461749 Komarova Natalia L 2006 Leonid Grinin Victor C de Munck Andrey Korotayev eds Language and Mathematics An evolutionary model of grammatical communication History amp mathematics Analyzing and modeling global development Moskva URSS pp 164 179 ISBN 978 5 484 01001 1 OCLC 182730511 Mithen Steven J 2005 The singing Neanderthals the origins of music language mind and body London Weidenfeld Nicolson ISBN 978 0 297 64317 3 OCLC 58052344 Niyogi Partha 2006 The computational nature of language learning and evolution Cambridge Massachusetts MIT Press ISBN 978 0 262 14094 2 OCLC 704652476 Nowak M A Komarova N L 2001 Towards an evolutionary theory of language Trends in Cognitive Sciences 5 7 288 295 doi 10 1016 S1364 6613 00 01683 1 PMID 11425617 S2CID 1358838 Pinker Steven 1994 The language instinct New York W Morrow and Co ISBN 978 0 688 12141 9 OCLC 28723210 Pinker S Bloom P 1990 Natural language and natural selection Behavioral and Brain Sciences 13 4 707 784 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 116 4044 doi 10 1017 S0140525X00081061 S2CID 6167614 Archived from the original on 2005 11 23 Retrieved 2005 12 20 Sampson Geoffrey 1996 Evolutionary language understanding London New York Cassell ISBN 978 0 304 33650 0 OCLC 832369870 Steels Luc 2002 Angelo Cangelosi Domenico Parisi eds Grounding symbols through evolutionary language games Simulating the evolution of language London New York Springer ISBN 978 1 85233 428 4 OCLC 47824669 External links EditAgent Based Models of Language Evolution ARTI Artificial Intelligence Laboratory Vrije Universiteit Brussel Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory Computerized comparative linguistics Fluid Construction Grammar Language Evolution and Computation Bibliography Archived 2014 04 21 at the Wayback Machine Language Evolution and Computation Research Unit University of Edinburgh Portals Language Linguistics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Evolutionary linguistics amp oldid 1134977396, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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